MADRID, May 26 (Reuters) – Spain’s Consumer Rights Ministry temporarily banned so-called prediction markets Polymarket and Kalshi for operating in the country without a gambling licence, the official state gazette showed on Tuesday.
• In a statement, the ministry said its gambling watchdog had opened a probe into the U.S.-based companies for allegedly breaching local rules by lacking mandatory administrative authorisation.
• The ban will last an estimated three or four months until the probe’s completion, it said.
• Prediction market users buy and sell stakes on the outcome of future events, with prices reflecting the probability of one outcome or another occurring.
• Spain – like other European jurisdictions – considers prediction markets a form of gambling when bets are placed on uncertain outcomes.
• The ministry said unauthorised operators lack the required technical and regulatory safeguards like identity verification systems, access control mechanisms for minors and for people who have self-excluded or are banned from gambling, as well as the standards needed to protect users.
• Once a niche corner of the internet, prediction markets have mushroomed into a multi-billion-dollar industry after gaining a foothold in U.S. politics in 2024.
(Reporting by David Latona; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus)


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