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DraftKings is moving deeper into federally regulated event contracts, expanding a strategy that increasingly blurs the line between sportsbook products and financial trading infrastructure.

Through its DKeX exchange entity, the company filed its first event contract templates with the CFTC on May 22, 2026. The filings cover two classes of contracts, “GAMEPROPERTY” and “GAMEWIN,” with official listing scheduled after the close of business on May 27.

The DCM Structure

DKeX is registered as a Designated Contract Market, a CFTC-regulated board of trade authorised to list futures, options, and event contracts under a single federal framework.

Under the DCM framework, operators can offer event contracts without separate state sportsbook licenses.

Rather than filing contracts one by one, DKeX is using a template system that sets common parameters across multiple asset classes and can later be extended to additional listings.

Each contract follows the same baseline terms: binary payout, $1.00 notional size, $0.01 minimum tick, 24/7 trading, and position accountability capped at 125,000 contracts per market.

Sport-specific schedules are attached as riders. GAMEPROPERTY covers football, ice hockey, MMA, soccer, and tennis. GAMEWIN extends that to baseball, basketball, golf, and motorsports.

Expanding the Federal Event Contract Model


The DKeX filings
come as more firms explore event contracts under the federal framework rather than through state sportsbook structures.

The federal model offers one license, standardized product terms, and centralized clearing instead of dozens of separate state approvals.


Sporttrade recently moved fully into the federal model
, announcing plans to shut down sportsbook operations in five states while seeking approval to operate as a derivatives exchange and clearinghouse under the CFTC.

DraftKings launched “DraftKings Predictions” in late 2025, while FanDuel partnered with CME Group on a parallel product, “FanDuel Predicts.”

Market Making and Order Flow


Flutter Entertainment is already monetising the sector
as a market maker, using its pricing infrastructure across third-party platforms rather than operating a standalone retail exchange.

That model has also drawn criticism. DraftKings co-founder Matt Kalish recently argued that platforms like Kalshi function more like sportsbooks than neutral exchanges. He said retail order flow is effectively routed toward institutional market makers such as Susquehanna.

The filings suggest DraftKings wants a larger role in both retail distribution and liquidity provision around event contracts.

This article was written by Tanya Chepkova at www.financemagnates.com.

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