DKNG · CIK 1883685
What DraftKings Inc. told the SEC could break it.
2 self-disclosed vulnerabilities, pulled from its own filings — each in the company’s words, with the source. This is the risk register almost nobody reads.
A limited set so far — we surface every cited disclosure we’ve extracted for DKNG. More may follow as additional filings are processed.
In its own words
What could break it.
Regulatory & policy
- gaming/betting licensing and prediction-markets (CFTC/NFA) regulationhigh
DraftKings' Sportsbook, iGaming, DFS, lottery courier and prediction-markets offerings depend on a patchwork of US/foreign gaming licenses and CFTC/NFA registration; rules can change with political/social norms and adverse interpretation, and licensees face suspension/revocation risk.
“DraftKings is subject to various U.S. and foreign laws and regulations that affect our ability to operate our Sportsbook, iGaming, DFS, digital lottery courier and prediction markets product offerings. These product offerings are generally subject to regulations that could change based on political and social norms and that could be interpreted in ways that could negatively impact our business.”
SEC filing →As of 2026
Supplier concentration
- third-party sports-data providers (Sportradar, Genius Sports)medium
DraftKings depends on a limited set of third-party sports-data providers (Sportradar, Genius Sports) for the real-time data used to settle bets and rank DFS contests; non-performance or termination would raise costs and disrupt operations.
“We rely on third-party sports data providers, such as SportRadar and Genius Sports, among others, to obtain accurate information regarding schedules, results, performance and outcomes of sporting events for our Sportsbook and DFS products. We rely on this data to determine when and how bets are settled and how contestants rank in their DFS contests.”
SEC filing →As of 2026
The hidden graph
Who it depends on, and who depends on it.
Relationships surfaced from filings — including ones disclosed by the other side, which is how the non-obvious ones come to light.
Its suppliers
Amazon Web Services (Amazon.com, Inc.)
“We rely on Amazon Web Services to deliver our product offerings to users, and any disruption of or interference with our use of Amazon Web Services could adversely affect our business, financial condition, results of operations and prospects. We host certain of our product offerings and support our operations using Amazon Web Services (“AWS”), a third-party provider of cloud infrastructure services, along with other service providers.”
Cited →“We work with regulated online gambling operators, including industry heavyweights Flutter, DraftKings, BetMGM, Caesars, Bet365, ESPNBet, Entain and Evoke.”
Cited →CME Group Inc. (Chicago Mercantile Exchange)
“We rely on third-party market infrastructure providers, including Wedbush Securities Inc. (“Wedbush”) in its capacity as our futures commission merchant (“FCM”) and Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. (“CME”) and Crypto.com | Derivatives North America (“CDNA”), each in their capacities as the DCMs on which our prediction markets are listed and derivatives clearing organizations (“DCO”) that clear and settle such contracts.”
Cited →“We rely on third-party sports data providers, such as SportRadar and Genius Sports, among others, to obtain accurate information regarding schedules, results, performance and outcomes of sporting events for our Sportsbook and DFS products.”
Cited →“We rely on third-party sports data providers, such as SportRadar and Genius Sports, among others, to obtain accurate information regarding schedules, results, performance and outcomes of sporting events for our Sportsbook and DFS products.”
Cited →
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