Billionaire Bill Ackman recently suggested Eric Adams should drop out of the NYC mayoral race and “fund his future” by first placing a Polymarket bet. This feels like it should be illegal. But is it?
Discussion
Billionaire Bill Ackman recently suggested Eric Adams should drop out of the NYC mayoral race and “fund his future” by first placing a Polymarket bet. This feels like it should be illegal. But is it?
Prediction markets began as strictly limited academic exercises to study whether financial markets might outperform polling and other forecasting. But some court wins and a much friendlier political climate have allowed these platforms to dramatically expand.
Prediction markets generally fall under the regulatory authority of the CFTC. Unlike the more retail-focused SEC, the CFTC has a different approach to trading on insider information.
But these markets have also butted up against other regulatory regimes, like gambling authorities. Kalshi in particular has argued in court that it is a trading platform, not a gambling site, although their advertising has invited customers to come “bet”.
Unlike the SEC, the CFTC’s mandate is centered on market integrity and preventing fraud or manipulation — not on consumer protection. Can its existing rules work for these retail-dominated platforms?
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