Robinhood Sues Nevada and New Jersey over Event Contract Threats

Wednesday, 20/08/2025 | 07:11 GMT by Arnab Shome
  • The trading platform alleged that it is facing “immediate threat of civil penalties and criminal prosecution” in these two states.
  • The lawsuits came as Robinhood continued to expand its event contract offerings.
Vlad Tenev, CEO and Co-Founder of Robinhood; Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Vlad Tenev, CEO and Co-Founder of Robinhood; Photo: Wikimedia Commons

The derivatives arm of Robinhood (Nasdaq: HOOD) has sued Nevada and New Jersey gaming officials to prevent any enforcement actions in the two US states over its sports event contracts.

Preventing Possible Actions by the Authorities

According to court documents filed by Robinhood Derivatives on Tuesday, the lawsuit was filed against Nevada and New Jersey gaming regulators and their attorneys general. The trading platform alleged that the state authorities continued to try to stop it from offering event contracts in the two states.

In a separate complaint, the Robinhood unit detailed that it started offering the event contracts in the two states after the US federal courts allowed prediction market Kalshi to offer them earlier this year.

Event contracts allow people to trade on the outcome of any event, whether sports or politics. These contracts are simple in nature, as the outcome of any event can be either positive or negative.

event contract

Robinhood launched its prediction markets hub in the two states earlier this year. Its contracts trade on the derivatives trading platform KalshiEx, which is a designated contract market under the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

“If states could regulate some but not all entities relevant to these transactions, such regulation would infringe on the CFTC’s exclusive jurisdiction and fracture what Congress intended to be a uniform set of regulations for commodity futures and swaps trading,” the Robinhood complaint added.

The company's legal pursuit came as it faced an “immediate threat of civil penalties and criminal prosecution” from state officials. It highlighted that the legal move came as it was left with no other choice.

The Event Contracts Market Is Growing

FinanceMagnates.com recently reported that Robinhood expanded its prediction markets to include professional and college football.

Since the launch of prediction markets, Robinhood has reported more than two billion contracts traded. The company already offers markets tied to cryptocurrencies, economic indicators, cultural events, and other sports.

Meanwhile, a significant part of the prediction market runs offshore, including crypto-based Polymarket. However, those platforms claim not to allow US residents.

The derivatives arm of Robinhood (Nasdaq: HOOD) has sued Nevada and New Jersey gaming officials to prevent any enforcement actions in the two US states over its sports event contracts.

Preventing Possible Actions by the Authorities

According to court documents filed by Robinhood Derivatives on Tuesday, the lawsuit was filed against Nevada and New Jersey gaming regulators and their attorneys general. The trading platform alleged that the state authorities continued to try to stop it from offering event contracts in the two states.

In a separate complaint, the Robinhood unit detailed that it started offering the event contracts in the two states after the US federal courts allowed prediction market Kalshi to offer them earlier this year.

Event contracts allow people to trade on the outcome of any event, whether sports or politics. These contracts are simple in nature, as the outcome of any event can be either positive or negative.

event contract

Robinhood launched its prediction markets hub in the two states earlier this year. Its contracts trade on the derivatives trading platform KalshiEx, which is a designated contract market under the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

“If states could regulate some but not all entities relevant to these transactions, such regulation would infringe on the CFTC’s exclusive jurisdiction and fracture what Congress intended to be a uniform set of regulations for commodity futures and swaps trading,” the Robinhood complaint added.

The company's legal pursuit came as it faced an “immediate threat of civil penalties and criminal prosecution” from state officials. It highlighted that the legal move came as it was left with no other choice.

The Event Contracts Market Is Growing

FinanceMagnates.com recently reported that Robinhood expanded its prediction markets to include professional and college football.

Since the launch of prediction markets, Robinhood has reported more than two billion contracts traded. The company already offers markets tied to cryptocurrencies, economic indicators, cultural events, and other sports.

Meanwhile, a significant part of the prediction market runs offshore, including crypto-based Polymarket. However, those platforms claim not to allow US residents.

About the Author: Arnab Shome
Arnab Shome
  • 7315 Articles
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About the Author: Arnab Shome
Arnab Shome is an electronics engineer-turned-financial editor. He holds a Bachelor of Technology from the National Institute of Technology, Agartala. He entered the retail trading industry about a decade ago, covering the cryptocurrency market for Finance Magnates, and later expanded his coverage to include forex and CFDs as well. His work at Finance Magnates includes C-level interviews, data-driven analysis, opinion pieces, and scoops of industry exclusives. He also contributes to Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry report. Area of coverage: 1. CFD broker-related news 2. Industry-related Regulatory updates and developments 3. New retail trading trends 4. Prop trading industry updates 5. Executive interviews Education: Bachelor of Technology - National Institute of Technology, Agartala (India)
  • 7315 Articles
  • 133 Followers

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