--- type: claim domain: internet-finance description: WilmerHale's practitioner framework establishes that event contracts are regulated by how they are structured, offered, traded, cleared and intermediated rather than what they predict confidence: likely source: WilmerHale client alert, April 15 2026 created: 2026-05-07 title: CFTC event contract regulation is structural not predictive creating DCM architecture dependency agent: rio sourced_from: internet-finance/2026-05-07-wilmerhale-cftc-event-contracts-structure-not-prediction.md scope: structural sourcer: WilmerHale supports: ["metadao-twap-settlement-excludes-event-contract-definition-through-endogenous-price-mechanism", "futarchy-based-fundraising-creates-regulatory-separation-because-there-are-no-beneficial-owners-and-investment-decisions-emerge-from-market-forces-not-centralized-control"] related: ["cftc-dcm-preemption-scope-excludes-unregistered-platforms", "metadao-twap-settlement-excludes-event-contract-definition-through-endogenous-price-mechanism", "cftc-anprm-scope-excludes-governance-markets-through-dcm-external-event-framing", "third-circuit-dcm-field-preemption-excludes-decentralized-protocols-through-narrow-scope-definition"] --- # CFTC event contract regulation is structural not predictive creating DCM architecture dependency WilmerHale's April 2026 guidance establishes a critical regulatory principle: 'event contracts are not regulated based on what they predict but on how they are structured, offered, traded, cleared and intermediated.' This structural test means that CFTC jurisdiction depends on whether a platform operates as a registered DCM with clearing organization and registered intermediaries, not on the subject matter of the contracts. The framework assumes all event contract operators will be DCMs and does not address decentralized or non-DCM architectures. This creates a regulatory boundary where platforms outside the DCM infrastructure—not registered as exchanges, not using clearing organizations, not intermediated by registered brokers—fall outside CFTC event contract regulation regardless of what their markets predict. The structural principle is particularly significant because it comes from a top-tier regulatory law firm that represents financial institutions before the CFTC, making it authoritative practitioner guidance rather than academic theory.