With a month to go before the U.S. election, prediction market Kalshi just got cleared to resume listing its contracts on which party will control each house of Congress.
On Tuesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia denied a motion by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to halt the contracts pending the agency's appeal of the case it lost to Kalshi in a lower court last month.
"The Commission has failed to demonstrate that it or the public will suffer irreparable injury absent a stay pending appeal, and therefore its motion for a stay is denied without prejudice to renewal should substantiating evidence arise," wrote Circuit Judge Patricia Millett. "The administrative stay is hereby dissolved."
Following its long-sought victory in the lower court, Kalshi listed the contracts on Sept. 13. They traded for only a few hours before the appeals court granted an administrative stay, which it lifted Tuesday.
Kalshi, the sole U.S.-regulated prediction market, sued the CFTC last year after the agency denied the exchange's application to list election contracts, on the grounds that they constituted gaming and would be contrary to the public interest.
While it's been fighting the agency in court, the New York-based company, which settles bets in dollars, has watched crypto-powered rival Polymarket, which is barred from doing business in the U.S., nevertheless rack up record volumes during this election year. Over $1 billion alone has been staked on Polymarket's contract on who will win the presidency.
A Kalshi spokesperson told CoinDesk the company did not yet have a timetable for resuming listing the contracts, but that it would "very soon."