Updated
Updated · Harvard Gazette · May 19
Prediction Markets Draw Insider-Trading Scrutiny After Soldier Placed $400,000 in Classified Bets
Updated
Updated · Harvard Gazette · May 19

Prediction Markets Draw Insider-Trading Scrutiny After Soldier Placed $400,000 in Classified Bets

10 articles · Updated · Harvard Gazette · May 19
  • A U.S. Army soldier was charged in April with using classified information to wager more than $400,000 on Polymarket tied to a mission to capture Nicolás Maduro, intensifying scrutiny of prediction markets.
  • That case, along with a New York Times investigation into well-timed Polymarket bets on the Iran war, crypto and other events, has sharpened concerns about insider trading and market manipulation.
  • Harvard law professor Howell Jackson said event contracts can resemble gambling even if they are market-priced, and warned their rapid spread among younger users carries addiction and consumer-protection risks.
  • Jackson said oversight is murky: some contracts fall under CFTC authority, but political, sports and offshore markets such as Polymarket sit in contested territory, making abuse harder to police.
  • He argued Congress may need a broader federal consumer-protection framework, because current rules formally ban manipulation but lack the structure to monitor thousands of event contracts effectively.
With military secrets now a commodity, how can the US prevent prediction markets from becoming a tool for its adversaries?
Are prediction markets an innovative forecasting tool or simply a new, unregulated casino fueling a national gambling crisis?
As federal and state regulators battle for control, what financial and legal risks do millions of American bettors now face?