Europe’s markets watchdog has put prediction-market operators on notice: your event contracts might already be regulated — and that could trigger a long-standing EU retail ban on binary options. On July 3, the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) clarified that event-based contracts sold in the EU need to be reviewed under the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II (MiFID II). If those contracts meet MiFID II’s definition of a financial instrument, ESMA says the EU’s 2018 retail restrictions on binary options would automatically apply. The statement doesn’t create new law; it simply interprets how existing rules may cover some prediction-market products now being promoted to European users. ESMA’s message is blunt: calling a product a “prediction market” or “event contract” isn’t enough to avoid financial regulation. Firms and national supervisors across the bloc must assess whether these contracts qualify as financial instruments — and if they do, binary options limits kick in without further rulemaking. Why this matters for crypto-focused platforms - Offshore operators such as Polymarket have drawn particular regulatory attention. Other notable players like Kalshi and Crypto.com are regulated by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) for their U.S. activities, but none of the major prediction-market platforms currently run a licensed business inside the EU. - ESMA’s clarification arrives amid rising enforcement and consumer-protection actions targeting prediction markets in Europe and beyond. Recent enforcement and warnings - Spain’s Ministry of Consumer Affairs temporarily blocked Kalshi and Polymarket on May 26, concluding the platforms lacked required gambling licenses under Spanish law. - On June 19, gambling regulators from nine European countries — including Belgium, France, Germany and Spain — issued a joint warning about unlicensed gambling websites operating across Europe, flagging consumer-protection concerns around major events such as the FIFA World Cup. - Outside Europe, the Kentucky government filed a lawsuit last month against Polymarket and Kalshi, alleging the platforms facilitate illegal sports betting in the state. - Polymarket has also faced accusations of deceptive advertising targeting U.S. users, ramping up scrutiny on the platform. What operators need to do ESMA’s guidance places clear responsibilities on any firm planning a European launch: they must determine both whether their products are financial instruments under MiFID II and whether national laws treat them as gambling. Failing to do so risks the kind of enforcement actions already seen in Spain and the coordinated warnings from national gambling authorities. Bottom line: ESMA hasn’t changed the rules, but it has sharpened the spotlight. For prediction-market operators, especially those in the crypto space considering EU expansion, the regulator’s clarification is a clear signal to do thorough legal homework — or face regulatory pushback. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news