State Regulator Targets Platforms Operating Outside the Law
The Michigan Gaming Control Board (MGCB) has launched formal investigations into several platforms running unlicensed sports prediction markets, raising alarms over consumer safety and the integrity of the state’s legal gambling industry. Among the companies under scrutiny are Kalshi and Robinhood, both of which offer products allowing users to trade on sports outcomes—activities the MGCB argues fall outside Michigan’s regulatory framework for legal sports betting.
“These platforms bypass our regulatory structure and raise real concerns about consumer protection,” said MGCB Executive Director Henry Williams. “They not only put users at risk but also erode trust in Michigan’s legal sports betting market.”
Prediction Markets Blur the Line Between Betting and Trading
At the heart of the MGCB’s concerns is how these prediction platforms frame sports-based contracts as financial investments. Williams emphasized that sports betting in Michigan is intended as a form of entertainment, not speculative trading. “Framing these products as investment vehicles risks misleading consumers and undermining the principles of responsible gambling,” he said.
The MGCB also warns that these operations—unbound by Michigan’s strict age limits, identity verification, and data security standards—present a host of risks, from fraud and identity theft to underage gambling. While licensed sportsbooks must follow protocols like AML safeguards and self-exclusion systems, many prediction platforms allow users as young as 18, violating Michigan’s 21+ age rule for legal betting.
Michigan Joins Broader Regulatory Push Across the U.S.
Michigan isn’t acting alone. The state joins a growing list—including Ohio, Nevada, New Jersey, and Connecticut—that have taken aim at similar unlicensed operators. Regulatory bodies nationwide are cracking down on platforms that present gambling in the guise of financial products, which could confuse consumers and erode the line between speculative investment and entertainment.
Legal tensions are rising as companies like Kalshi push back. Kalshi is already challenging cease-and-desist orders in Nevada and New Jersey courts, claiming oversight by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) under the federal Commodity Exchange Act. That same federal-versus-state conflict is playing out in Michigan, where the MGCB is involved in another legal fight over Churchill Downs’ TwinSpires app and advance deposit wagering.
Ongoing Enforcement and Widening Scope
The probe into prediction markets is just the latest in a series of actions by the MGCB to reinforce Michigan’s legal gambling landscape. In the same week, the agency issued 13 cease-and-desist letters to illegal offshore casinos, part of a broader campaign that has already targeted over 50 unauthorized gambling sites this year.
Williams reaffirmed the regulator’s mission: “We will continue to investigate and take all necessary steps to ensure that Michigan bettors are engaging with safe, legal, and regulated platforms.”
As the line between financial speculation and sports wagering grows thinner, Michigan is doubling down on its stance: betting should be fun—and above all, safe.