Source: CryptoTale
Original Title: Portugal Gives Polymarket 48 Hours to Leave Over Vote Bets
Original Link:
Overview
Portugal’s gambling regulator has ordered blockchain-based prediction market Polymarket to leave the country within 48 hours following a sharp rise in betting activity linked to Sunday’s presidential election. The decision came after authorities said the platform operated without a licence and offered illegal political betting services under Portuguese law.
The regulator, Serviço de Regulação e Inspeção de Jogos (SRIJ), said wagers on the Jan. 18 presidential vote exceeded €103 million. Officials stated that Polymarket did not hold authorization to provide betting services in Portugal and therefore operated outside the legal framework.
Under Portugal’s 2015 online gambling law, licensed operators may only offer sports betting, casino games, and horse racing. The law explicitly bans betting on political events and other real-world outcomes, placing Polymarket’s core offerings outside permitted activity.
Election Betting Triggers Regulatory Action
SRIJ said it became aware of Polymarket only recently, after unusually high volumes appeared around the presidential election. Reports showed more than €4 million flowed into election markets in the hours before official results became public.
Total trading volume across the main presidential market later exceeded €110 million. Regulators flagged the timing of the bets as a concern, since some wagers appeared to precede public disclosure of results.
Authorities questioned whether some participants accessed exit polls or other non-public information. That concern intensified scrutiny of the platform’s operations inside Portugal.
SRIJ stated that the website lacked authorization to offer betting services in the country. The regulator added that national law prohibits betting on political events, whether domestic or international.
Platform Access and Broader Market Concerns
Polymarket remained accessible in Portugal following the notice. Regulators said they may instruct internet service providers to block access if the platform fails to comply with the order.
Other prediction markets, including Kalshi, Myriad, and Limitless, also remained accessible at the time of reporting. Authorities did not announce immediate action against those platforms.
Polymarket allows users to buy shares on outcomes tied to politics, sports, and other real-world events. The model enables traders to profit if their chosen outcome proves correct.
SRIJ warned that it oversees only licensed operators. The regulator stated that it cannot guarantee that Portuguese users will recover funds once access to an illegal platform is blocked.
Global Pressure Builds on Polymarket
Polymarket, founded in 2020, now faces restrictions in more than 30 countries. Those jurisdictions include Singapore, Russia, Belgium, Italy, and Ukraine. Some countries have blacklisted the platform entirely. Others allow local users to view markets but block trading functions.
Portugal’s action follows similar concerns raised elsewhere. In one case, three wallets reportedly earned more than $630,000 by betting on a political outcome before the event became public. Comparable patterns also appeared in entertainment markets.
In the United States, regulators have also increased scrutiny. Tennessee issued a cease-and-desist order against Polymarket earlier this month. A similar platform faced a comparable order but later secured a temporary injunction on sports-related contracts.
As European regulators assess these cases, one question remains central: how should decentralized prediction markets fit within national gambling laws designed long before blockchain-based platforms existed?
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SchrodingerWallet
· 15h ago
Portugal's response was so quick—expelling within 48 hours, almost like chasing people away. Haha
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeCrier
· 01-20 18:49
Portugal has directly shut down, this is the government's attitude towards on-chain prediction markets... However, the million-level betting volume is indeed impressive, no wonder they can't sit still.
View OriginalReply0
ProofOfNothing
· 01-20 18:45
Here we go again, regulators are coming to crack down on the prediction market... What is Portugal afraid of?
View OriginalReply0
BuyHighSellLow
· 01-20 18:37
Portugal's move is too ruthless; they just push people out when they want. Polymarket might be forced out this time.
View OriginalReply0
ruggedSoBadLMAO
· 01-20 18:22
Haha, Portugal is really panicking now. This is the power of centralized regulation.
Portugal Orders Polymarket to Exit Within 48 Hours Over €100M Election Betting
Source: CryptoTale Original Title: Portugal Gives Polymarket 48 Hours to Leave Over Vote Bets Original Link:
Overview
Portugal’s gambling regulator has ordered blockchain-based prediction market Polymarket to leave the country within 48 hours following a sharp rise in betting activity linked to Sunday’s presidential election. The decision came after authorities said the platform operated without a licence and offered illegal political betting services under Portuguese law.
The regulator, Serviço de Regulação e Inspeção de Jogos (SRIJ), said wagers on the Jan. 18 presidential vote exceeded €103 million. Officials stated that Polymarket did not hold authorization to provide betting services in Portugal and therefore operated outside the legal framework.
Under Portugal’s 2015 online gambling law, licensed operators may only offer sports betting, casino games, and horse racing. The law explicitly bans betting on political events and other real-world outcomes, placing Polymarket’s core offerings outside permitted activity.
Election Betting Triggers Regulatory Action
SRIJ said it became aware of Polymarket only recently, after unusually high volumes appeared around the presidential election. Reports showed more than €4 million flowed into election markets in the hours before official results became public.
Total trading volume across the main presidential market later exceeded €110 million. Regulators flagged the timing of the bets as a concern, since some wagers appeared to precede public disclosure of results.
Authorities questioned whether some participants accessed exit polls or other non-public information. That concern intensified scrutiny of the platform’s operations inside Portugal.
SRIJ stated that the website lacked authorization to offer betting services in the country. The regulator added that national law prohibits betting on political events, whether domestic or international.
Platform Access and Broader Market Concerns
Polymarket remained accessible in Portugal following the notice. Regulators said they may instruct internet service providers to block access if the platform fails to comply with the order.
Other prediction markets, including Kalshi, Myriad, and Limitless, also remained accessible at the time of reporting. Authorities did not announce immediate action against those platforms.
Polymarket allows users to buy shares on outcomes tied to politics, sports, and other real-world events. The model enables traders to profit if their chosen outcome proves correct.
SRIJ warned that it oversees only licensed operators. The regulator stated that it cannot guarantee that Portuguese users will recover funds once access to an illegal platform is blocked.
Global Pressure Builds on Polymarket
Polymarket, founded in 2020, now faces restrictions in more than 30 countries. Those jurisdictions include Singapore, Russia, Belgium, Italy, and Ukraine. Some countries have blacklisted the platform entirely. Others allow local users to view markets but block trading functions.
Portugal’s action follows similar concerns raised elsewhere. In one case, three wallets reportedly earned more than $630,000 by betting on a political outcome before the event became public. Comparable patterns also appeared in entertainment markets.
In the United States, regulators have also increased scrutiny. Tennessee issued a cease-and-desist order against Polymarket earlier this month. A similar platform faced a comparable order but later secured a temporary injunction on sports-related contracts.
As European regulators assess these cases, one question remains central: how should decentralized prediction markets fit within national gambling laws designed long before blockchain-based platforms existed?