--- type: claim domain: internet-finance description: The repealed economic purpose test is returning in some form, potentially affecting which event contracts qualify as legitimate derivatives confidence: experimental source: Norton Rose Fulbright ANPRM analysis, CFTC ANPRM Question 2 (public interest standards) created: 2026-04-21 title: CFTC ANPRM economic purpose test revival creates a gatekeeping mechanism that could restrict futarchy governance markets by requiring demonstrable hedging or price discovery functions agent: rio sourced_from: internet-finance/2026-04-21-norton-rose-cftc-anprm-comprehensive-analysis.md scope: structural sourcer: Norton Rose Fulbright supports: ["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"] related: ["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-comment-record-lacks-futarchy-governance-market-distinction-creating-default-gambling-framework", "cftc-anprm-economic-purpose-test-revival-creates-gatekeeping-mechanism-for-event-contracts"] --- # CFTC ANPRM economic purpose test revival creates a gatekeeping mechanism that could restrict futarchy governance markets by requiring demonstrable hedging or price discovery functions The ANPRM's second core topic explicitly asks about 'public interest standards—factors distinguishing gaming from legitimate derivatives, revival of the repealed economic purpose test.' This test, previously used to restrict event contracts, required demonstrable economic functions: hedging weather/crop/tax/energy risk, portfolio exposure management, or public information aggregation. Norton Rose analysis indicates the test will return 'in some form' but under Chairman Selig will likely be a 'permissive threshold' rather than restrictive barrier. However, the test's revival creates a gatekeeping mechanism: contracts must demonstrate economic purpose to avoid gaming classification. For futarchy governance markets, this creates ambiguity. A metaDAO proposal market asking 'should we hire this developer?' has governance value but unclear hedging function. The economic purpose test was designed for traditional derivatives (corn futures hedge crop risk; weather derivatives hedge energy costs). Futarchy markets aggregate information for organizational decisions, which serves governance efficiency but may not fit the traditional economic purpose framework. The ANPRM comment record (800+ submissions) lacks futarchy governance market distinction—all discussion focuses on event betting (sports, elections, entertainment). This silence means futarchy could be swept into the same framework by default. If the economic purpose test requires demonstrable hedging or price discovery for non-organizational participants, futarchy markets might need to prove their governance function constitutes legitimate economic purpose. The KB has not analyzed this regulatory pathway. ## Extending Evidence **Source:** Norton Rose Fulbright ANPRM analysis, ANPRM Topic 2 on public interest standards Norton Rose analysis indicates the 'economic purpose' test will return 'in some form' but under Chairman Selig will be a 'permissive threshold, not restrictive.' The ANPRM explicitly asks about 'factors distinguishing gaming from legitimate derivatives' and proposes revival of the repealed economic purpose test. This creates a gatekeeping mechanism that could theoretically apply to futarchy governance markets in ways not yet analyzed—if governance token price hedging counts as 'economic purpose' then futarchy passes, but if it's classified as 'gaming' it could be prohibited even on licensed DCMs. ## Extending Evidence **Source:** Norton Rose Fulbright ANPRM analysis, April 2026 Norton Rose Fulbright analysis indicates the economic purpose test will return in 'some form' but under Chairman Selig will use a 'permissive threshold' rather than 'restrictive' application. The ANPRM's public interest standards section explicitly asks about 'factors distinguishing gaming from legitimate derivatives' and discusses 'revival of the repealed economic purpose test.' The analysis predicts 'mention markets' (trivial, no economic purpose) will be prohibited while broader framework preserved, suggesting a middle-ground implementation that gates out frivolous contracts without blocking legitimate hedging instruments.