Novig Receives CFTC Designation, Becoming the Second Federally Regulated Sports Prediction Market in a Week

Novig has secured CFTC approval to operate as a federally regulated prediction market focused exclusively on sports, positioning itself to expand across all 50 states this summer and compete directly with Kalshi, DraftKings, and FanDuel.
Novig Receives CFTC Designation

Novig has received designation from the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission as a Designated Contract Market, making it the second sports-adjacent prediction market to receive federal regulatory approval in a single week, following ProphetX’s designation on June 11.

Unlike broader prediction markets, Novig is built specifically around sports — a focused approach that Founder and CEO Jacob Fortinsky says gives it a competitive advantage over platforms that dilute their product across politics, finance, and culture. With CFTC designation in hand, Novig can now operate under a single national regulatory framework across all 50 states, doing away with the state-by-state licensing patchwork that governs traditional sportsbooks.

How Novig Works

Novig operates as a peer-to-peer sports trading platform, meaning users trade directly against each other rather than against a house. The company says this model cuts out the traditional middleman — the sportsbook that sets lines and builds in a margin — and instead charges a fee on trades. Novig reports that it has already processed more than $5 billion in cumulative trading volume, a figure that reflects its prior operation under a Colorado state sports betting license and a brief stint in the sweepstakes market before pivoting to the federal exchange model.

Prior to seeking CFTC designation, Novig operated its exchange entity under Ludlow Exchange LLC. Under the new federal framework, it will be required to implement enhanced market surveillance and anti-manipulation protections, along with a 21-and-older age restriction enforced nationwide.

What This Means for Sports Bettors

For sports fans and bettors, Novig’s arrival as a CFTC-regulated platform adds a meaningful new option to an already expanding landscape. The company will compete with Kalshi, DraftKings Predictions, FanDuel Predicts, and Polymarket — each of which brings a different approach to event-based trading on sports outcomes.

The practical difference between a prediction market and a traditional sportsbook is pricing. Where a sportsbook builds a margin into its odds, prediction markets charge fees on top of market-clearing prices. For high-volume or sophisticated bettors, this structure can offer better value on certain contracts — a consideration worth understanding before choosing a platform.

Novig has said a nationwide rollout is expected this summer. For those following the evolving sports betting landscape, it’s worth keeping an eye on the emerging DFS and sports betting platforms page for updates, and checking current live sports betting odds to understand how exchange pricing compares to traditional sportsbook lines when Novig launches.

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Bill Christy


Sports Betting Contributor

Bill is a high-volume sports bettor who runs his own sports investing business. He has an uncanny ability to find tons of mathematical edges on each day’s sports betting card. Bill covers all sports but his bread and butter is UFC, Golf, and College Hoops. Find him on X at @LarrysLocks2