The Commodity Futures Trading Commission published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on June 25 that would fundamentally change how fully collateralized event contracts are reported. Instead of treating these contracts like swaps, the CFTC wants to move them into a futures-style reporting regime.
Event contracts have been operating under temporary regulatory relief since 2017. The CFTC is finally trying to make it permanent.
What the proposal actually does
The NPRM introduces a new regulatory section, §16.03, specifically dedicated to “Covered Event Contracts.”
Under the current setup, fully collateralized event contracts have been subject to swap data repository compliance requirements. The proposed framework would transition reporting obligations to Parts 15 through 18 of CFTC regulations, which govern futures and options reporting. Futures commission merchants, clearing members, and other market participants would report transaction data under these established rules instead.
CFTC Chairman Michael S. Selig framed the move as an effort to “future-proof the regulatory framework for event contracts.” The goal is replacing what he characterized as a disjointed no-action letter approach with something more structurally sound.
The backstory: why now
The CFTC took a step toward consolidation on May 13, 2026, issuing a consolidated no-action letter that provided clearer guidance for designated contract markets and derivatives clearing organizations regarding their reporting obligations. That letter laid the groundwork for this more formal rulemaking.
On June 10, the CFTC issued a separate NPRM addressing the review process for event contracts involving what the agency calls “enumerated activities,” including gaming. That proposal focuses on aligning these contracts with public-interest considerations. Together, the two proposals signal that the CFTC is conducting a comprehensive overhaul of how it regulates the event contract space.
The current proposal is open for public comment, with the specific deadline to be announced in the Federal Register. The parallel June 10 NPRM has its own comment period running concurrently.
What this means for investors
The most immediate impact is on compliance costs. Swap data reporting requires submissions to swap data repositories with detailed counterparty information. Futures-style reporting under Parts 15 through 18 is a more familiar and, for many participants, less burdensome framework. For platforms operating designated contract markets, this simplification could meaningfully reduce overhead.
Formal rules come with formal enforcement. Market participants who have been operating under no-action letters may find themselves subject to more rigorous scrutiny once a codified framework is in place.
The comment period represents an opportunity for market participants to shape these rules before they’re finalized. Given that this framework will likely govern event contract reporting for years to come, the stakes of that public input process are not trivial.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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