When prediction markets smell like insider trading: why it matters and what we can do
We all like a good contrarian bet. But when those bets land suspiciously often, alarm bells should ring. Insider trading is a big problem. But how do you protect against it? That question has become urgent after a spate of high-dollar, well-timed wagers on Polymarket — bets that drew attention from researchers, journalists and even prosecutors. The headlines (and the chatter on crypto X threads) suggest prediction markets have moved from quirky forecasting tools into a new frontier for potential misuse.
Prediction markets like Polymarket let people trade on real-world events — everything from product launches to military actions. They promise two things: profit for savvy traders, and better aggregated forecasts for everyone. Trouble starts when the “savvy” traders are actually insiders with access to nonpublic information. When that happens, the markets stop being information aggregators and start functioning as clandestine profit machines that erode trust.
What happened on Polymarket and why people are worried
In recent months, researchers and journalists flagged a pattern: a small number of accounts placing large bets just before major developments — from a Venezuelan leadership change to U.S. military actions — and cashing out handsomely. Gizmodo chronicled how analytics tools and observers began tracking these suspiciously accurate trades and turning them into signals other traders copied. Meanwhile, mainstream outlets reported platforms hurriedly rewriting rules to ban trading on privileged or influenceable information. Those changes came after public pressure, congressional interest and regulators’ renewed attention. (gizmodo.com)
Why is this different from normal “edge” trading? Two important factors:
- Scale and timing. When bets cluster immediately before an event that wasn’t publicly signaled, it’s a classic red flag for nonpublic knowledge.
- Anonymity and on-chain plumbing. Many prediction markets allow crypto wallets and opaque account setups that make linking trades to specific insiders difficult. That obfuscation both invites and hides wrongdoing. (gizmodo.com)
The result: users who expect a fair marketplace begin to doubt the platform, lawmakers consider curbs, and regulators ask whether enforcement or new rules are necessary.
Insider trading is not just illegal finance — it’s an integrity problem
Insider trading on public securities is illegal for good reasons: it undermines investor fairness, distorts prices, and erodes confidence in markets. Prediction markets feel different to some because they’re often framed as “gambling” or opinion aggregation rather than finance. But the core harm is the same — privileged knowledge producing private gain at others’ expense and skewing the informational value of the market.
When insiders can monetize leaks or policy moves, two harms follow:
- Immediate unfairness: ordinary users lose against someone who had secret knowledge.
- Secondary harms to public goods: markets can become misinformation vectors (for example, traders leaking plans or manipulating headlines to move prices), or they can create incentives to suppress information for profit. (gizmodo.com)
Because prediction markets can touch on national security or high-stakes political events, the stakes can be higher than for a biotech earnings surprise — which is why you’re seeing state and federal attention.
How prediction markets and regulators are responding
Platforms and policymakers have started to act, and their approaches fall into two buckets:
- Platform-side changes. Polymarket and others have updated rules to forbid trading on markets where participants have confidential information or the ability to influence outcomes. They’re also deploying surveillance tools to flag suspicious trades and freezing accounts while investigating. Some exchanges have signed integrity pacts with third parties (sports leagues, for instance) to manage conflicts of interest. (apnews.com)
- Regulatory and legislative pressure. Congress and state regulators are scrutinizing whether prediction markets should be treated like gambling or regulated derivatives, and whether existing agencies (especially the CFTC) have the authority and will to police insider-like behavior on these platforms. The CFTC’s growing role in recent months has already reshaped how big prediction-market players operate in the U.S. (coindesk.com)
Those moves help, but they’re imperfect. Rule changes are only as good as enforcement, and enforcement is tricky when wallets, VPNs, and coordinated account-splitting hide who is trading.
Practical ways to guard against insider trading on prediction markets
Platforms, regulators and users each have roles to play. Here are practical defenses — some technical, some policy — that could reduce the problem.
- Stronger identity and KYC measures. Requiring verified identities for significant trades or suspicious markets makes it harder for insiders to hide behind anonymous wallets. It also creates audit trails for investigators.
- Transaction monitoring and anomaly detection. Use on-chain analytics and behavioral models to flag patterns like wallet splitting, concentrated buys minutes before event resolution, or repeated alpha from a single cluster of accounts.
- Position limits and resolution safeguards. Caps on single-account exposure and clearer rules for how and when markets resolve reduce the incentive to exploit nonpublic moves.
- Whistleblower incentives and disclosure rules. Create safe channels and rewards for insiders who report misuse, and consider requiring employees of sensitive institutions to recuse themselves from trading related contracts.
- Cross-platform cooperation. Markets should share suspicious-activity signals with each other and with regulators to avoid moving abuse from one platform to another.
- Clear legal penalties and public transparency. Legislatures and regulators can spell out consequences for abusing privileged knowledge on these platforms — making deterrence real, not theoretical. (apnews.com)
None of these steps are silver bullets. But layered, coordinated defenses — technical detection + identity + legal teeth — make it much costlier to profit from insider knowledge.
The investor dilemma
There’s a paradox at the heart of prediction markets. Their value comes from aggregating diverse private opinions; that same openness makes them vulnerable to cloaked insiders. For regular users who prize honest, reliable signals, the path forward is to demand higher standards: transparency about anti-abuse systems, public reporting when suspicious trades are investigated, and platform accountability when rules are broken.
My take
Prediction markets can be powerful forecasting tools — when they’re fair. But fairness requires tradeoffs: less anonymity for big bets, smarter monitoring, and stronger legal frameworks. If platforms, regulators and users don’t make those tradeoffs, we risk turning a useful experiment in collective intelligence into a playground for the well-connected.
If you care about the integrity of markets — whether security-sensitive events or the next product launch — push for transparency and enforcement. The future of prediction markets depends on building trust that profits should reward insight, not secrecy.
Sources
- Tracking Insider Trading on Polymarket Is Turning Into a Business of Its Own — Gizmodo. https://gizmodo.com/tracking-insider-trading-on-polymarket-is-turning-into-a-business-of-its-own-2000709286.
- Kalshi and Polymarket place new bans on insider trading as senators move to curb prediction markets — Associated Press. https://apnews.com/article/kalshi-polymarket-prediction-markets-cftc-trump-insider-trading-fe7435cf6efefd922aa2edb9a0e80a05.
- Polymarket Secures CFTC Approval for Regulated U.S. Return — CoinDesk (coverage of CFTC/Clearing developments). https://www.coindesk.com/business/2025/11/25/polymarket-secures-cftc-approval-for-regulated-u-s-return/.
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.
Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.