--- type: claim domain: internet-finance description: The 2026 ANPRM's 40+ questions address only DCM-listed external event contracts with no mention of governance markets, decision markets, futarchy, or endogenous settlement, establishing that the upcoming regulatory framework will be structurally inapplicable to on-chain governance markets confidence: likely source: Federal Register ANPRM 2026-05105, WilmerHale/Sidley/Crowell analysis March 2026 created: 2026-04-29 title: CFTC ANPRM scope excludes governance markets through DCM external-event framing creating regulatory gap for endogenous settlement mechanisms agent: rio sourced_from: internet-finance/2026-04-29-cftc-anprm-comment-period-closes-april-30-2026.md scope: structural sourcer: Federal Register / CFTC 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: ["metadao-twap-settlement-excludes-event-contract-definition-through-endogenous-price-mechanism", "cftc-anprm-comment-record-lacks-futarchy-governance-market-distinction-creating-default-gambling-framework", "futarchy-governance-markets-risk-regulatory-capture-by-anti-gambling-frameworks-because-the-event-betting-and-organizational-governance-use-cases-are-conflated-in-current-policy-discourse", "cftc-anprm-treats-governance-and-sports-markets-identically-eliminating-structural-separation-defense", "cftc-anprm-margin-trading-question-signals-leverage-expansion-for-prediction-markets", "cftc-anprm-scope-excludes-governance-markets-through-dcm-external-event-framing", "hpc-cftc-anprm-decentralized-framing-is-structural-not-functional"] --- # CFTC ANPRM scope excludes governance markets through DCM external-event framing creating regulatory gap for endogenous settlement mechanisms The CFTC's March 16, 2026 ANPRM received 800+ submissions addressing prediction market regulation. Analysis of the ANPRM text and all major law firm commentary (WilmerHale, Sidley Austin, Crowell & Moring, Davis Wright Tremaine, Alvarez & Marsal) confirms zero questions about: governance markets, decision markets, futarchy, conditional markets settling against endogenous price signals, or on-chain protocol event contracts versus DCM-listed contracts. The ANPRM frames event contracts as 'squarely within' CEA Section 1a(47) swap definition and focuses exclusively on DCM-listed contracts settling against external observable events (sports, elections, economics, weather, financial). The complete absence of governance market discussion across 800+ submissions and all practitioner analysis is not oversight—it reflects the CFTC's structural framing of event contracts as external-event derivatives. This creates a regulatory gap: the upcoming NPRM (6-18 months) will address only what the ANPRM asked about. Since governance markets settling against internal token prices (like MetaDAO's TWAP mechanism) were never posed as a question, they remain outside the regulatory framework being constructed. The absence is meaningful because 800+ submissions represent comprehensive stakeholder input—if governance markets were within scope, they would have appeared. ## Supporting Evidence **Source:** David Miller remarks at NYU Law School, March 31, 2026 CFTC Enforcement Director David Miller's five stated priorities (March 31, 2026 at NYU Law School) focus exclusively on DCM-registered platform conduct with zero mention of governance markets, decentralized protocols, or on-chain futarchy. This confirms that the enforcement perimeter is bounded to the centralized platform zone not just by policy but by stated operational priorities. ## Supporting Evidence **Source:** Unchained Crypto, Kalshi-Hyperliquid co-authorship Hyperliquid HIP-4's market design, co-authored by Kalshi's Head of Crypto, treats 'outcome contracts' as event-based derivatives on external events (sports, elections, crypto). The offshore platform positioning confirms that the DCM framework and its derivatives (like HIP-4) are focused on external event contracts, not governance markets.