Key Highlights
- Kalshi deployed whistleblower functionality allowing users to flag potential insider trading violations directly on market pages.
- New screening mechanisms prevent political candidates from placing bets on their own electoral races.
- The platform implemented blocks preventing athletes and officials from wagering on competitions within their respective leagues.
- Senator Adam Schiff’s Prediction Markets Are Gambling Act specifically targets sports-related betting contracts.
- Congressional representatives have put forward six separate regulatory proposals this year focusing on prediction market oversight.
As congressional pressure mounts on prediction markets, Kalshi has rolled out enhanced compliance mechanisms. The $22 billion platform unveiled a whistleblower system and improved user verification processes this week. These developments arrive amid multiple Senate proposals aimed at restricting sports and event-focused betting contracts.
Enhanced Compliance Systems at Kalshi and Polymarket
Kalshi implemented a dedicated “report insider trading” feature on individual market pages, enabling traders to identify suspicious activity. The platform confirmed it will investigate every submission and enforce consequences according to its user agreements. Additional safeguards now prevent political candidates from wagering on their own campaign outcomes.
The company specified that professional athletes and sports officials face restrictions on betting activities related to their own leagues. CEO Tarek Mansour acknowledged the challenges, noting, “No screening system is perfect, and bad actors will always try to cheat.” He explained, “We added a whistleblower functionality in our market page to make it easier for traders to flag potential violations.”
Polymarket discontinued markets related to potential military operations against Iran on February 28. Congressional officials had expressed alarm over contracts connected to violent incidents and matters of national security. Both Kalshi and Polymarket have encountered questions regarding their monitoring of sensitive trading categories.
The platforms pledged ongoing improvements to their compliance infrastructure. Their objective is identifying policy violations before transactions are finalized. Both operate under federal regulatory frameworks governing derivatives trading.
Congressional Proposals Focus on Sports and Event-Based Markets
Senator Adam Schiff unveiled the Prediction Markets Are Gambling Act earlier this week. This legislation would prohibit prediction platforms from offering sports-related event contracts. Republican Senator John Curtis joined as a co-sponsor of the measure.
Schiff said, “Sports prediction contracts are sports bets just with a different name.” He emphasized that these contracts function across all 50 states in contravention of existing state and federal regulations. This represents his second legislative effort targeting prediction markets in 2024.
Earlier this month on March 10, Schiff partnered with Representative Mike Levin to introduce the DEATH BETS Act. This proposal would prohibit contracts involving warfare, terrorist activities, political assassinations, or individual mortality. The legislation emerged following the elimination of Iran-related strike markets by both major platforms.
Six separate bills have been submitted this year by legislators seeking to regulate prediction trading platforms. Commodity Futures Trading Commission Commissioner Michael Selig expressed support for prediction markets. He emphasized that the CFTC maintains sole regulatory authority over these financial products.
Harry Crane, who teaches statistics at Rutgers University, weighed in on the ongoing discussion. He observed that investors already have access to oil futures and equity instruments that respond to conflict-related developments. Crane noted, “Stakeholders have taken steps to ensure market integrity already.”
He projected that regulatory frameworks will become more robust as the sector matures. Kalshi maintains its deployment of compliance enhancements while Senate legislation advances through the chambers. Current initiatives emphasize insider trading reporting capabilities and more rigorous user verification protocols.
