Polymarket CEO Hails 'Built Different' Trump Administration After Platform Wins U.S. Trading Approval

MarketDash Editorial Team
12 days ago
Polymarket has secured approval from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to offer intermediated trading in the U.S., marking a pivotal step in the prediction market's push to operate as a fully regulated exchange after years of being blocked from American customers.

The Green Light for Prediction Markets

Polymarket founder and CEO Shayne Coplan announced Tuesday that his prediction market platform has cleared a major regulatory hurdle, securing approval from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for intermediated trading in the United States. It's the kind of milestone that doesn't sound exciting until you realize what it means: American customers can now trade Polymarket contracts through brokerages and futures commission merchants, essentially paving the way for the platform to operate as a fully regulated exchange.

Coplan called it a "key milestone" toward integrating Polymarket into the U.S. financial system, and he wasn't shy about giving credit where he thinks it's due. He praised the CFTC, with special thanks to Acting Chair Caroline D. Pham, and had particularly warm words for the incoming Trump administration.

"This admin and commission are built different. The pace, thorough feedback on applications, working through weekends – unprecedented," Coplan said. "Quiet before the storm."

How Polymarket Got Here

This approval didn't materialize out of thin air. Polymarket acquired the holding company of QCEX, a licensed derivatives exchange and clearinghouse, for $112 million earlier this year. That deal was essentially the first domino in the platform's strategy to re-enter the U.S. market after being shut out for years.

The platform's website now indicates it's preparing for a U.S. launch and will be available to traders "soon." Whether "soon" means weeks or months is anyone's guess, but the regulatory pieces are falling into place.

Big Moves and Bigger Ambitions

This CFTC approval lands just weeks after Polymarket announced plans to launch a native token and airdrop following its official U.S. relaunch. The prediction market platform—where users wager real money on everything from elections to Fed decisions to major world events—is also reportedly in early discussions with investors to raise additional funding at a valuation between $12 billion and $15 billion.

That's a substantial leap from where things stood in October, when Polymarket secured a $2 billion investment from Intercontinental Exchange Inc. (ICE), the company that owns the New York Stock Exchange.

According to Dune Analytics, Polymarket has recorded cumulative trading volume exceeding $35.7 billion, with October alone hitting $4 billion in volume. The platform exploded into mainstream consciousness during last year's election season, with over $3 billion wagered on the presidential race between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris. Polymarket accurately predicted Trump's victory, though the platform also drew scrutiny over concerns about foreign influence and potential market manipulation.

Whether prediction markets like Polymarket represent the future of forecasting or simply a novel way to gamble on the news remains an open question. But with regulatory approval in hand and billions in trading volume behind it, Coplan's platform is positioning itself as more than just a flash in the pan.

Polymarket CEO Hails 'Built Different' Trump Administration After Platform Wins U.S. Trading Approval

MarketDash Editorial Team
12 days ago
Polymarket has secured approval from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to offer intermediated trading in the U.S., marking a pivotal step in the prediction market's push to operate as a fully regulated exchange after years of being blocked from American customers.

The Green Light for Prediction Markets

Polymarket founder and CEO Shayne Coplan announced Tuesday that his prediction market platform has cleared a major regulatory hurdle, securing approval from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for intermediated trading in the United States. It's the kind of milestone that doesn't sound exciting until you realize what it means: American customers can now trade Polymarket contracts through brokerages and futures commission merchants, essentially paving the way for the platform to operate as a fully regulated exchange.

Coplan called it a "key milestone" toward integrating Polymarket into the U.S. financial system, and he wasn't shy about giving credit where he thinks it's due. He praised the CFTC, with special thanks to Acting Chair Caroline D. Pham, and had particularly warm words for the incoming Trump administration.

"This admin and commission are built different. The pace, thorough feedback on applications, working through weekends – unprecedented," Coplan said. "Quiet before the storm."

How Polymarket Got Here

This approval didn't materialize out of thin air. Polymarket acquired the holding company of QCEX, a licensed derivatives exchange and clearinghouse, for $112 million earlier this year. That deal was essentially the first domino in the platform's strategy to re-enter the U.S. market after being shut out for years.

The platform's website now indicates it's preparing for a U.S. launch and will be available to traders "soon." Whether "soon" means weeks or months is anyone's guess, but the regulatory pieces are falling into place.

Big Moves and Bigger Ambitions

This CFTC approval lands just weeks after Polymarket announced plans to launch a native token and airdrop following its official U.S. relaunch. The prediction market platform—where users wager real money on everything from elections to Fed decisions to major world events—is also reportedly in early discussions with investors to raise additional funding at a valuation between $12 billion and $15 billion.

That's a substantial leap from where things stood in October, when Polymarket secured a $2 billion investment from Intercontinental Exchange Inc. (ICE), the company that owns the New York Stock Exchange.

According to Dune Analytics, Polymarket has recorded cumulative trading volume exceeding $35.7 billion, with October alone hitting $4 billion in volume. The platform exploded into mainstream consciousness during last year's election season, with over $3 billion wagered on the presidential race between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris. Polymarket accurately predicted Trump's victory, though the platform also drew scrutiny over concerns about foreign influence and potential market manipulation.

Whether prediction markets like Polymarket represent the future of forecasting or simply a novel way to gamble on the news remains an open question. But with regulatory approval in hand and billions in trading volume behind it, Coplan's platform is positioning itself as more than just a flash in the pan.