Updated
Updated · Morning Brew · Jun 21
CFTC Seeks Comment on Reality-Show Betting After $32.7 Million Hit Survivor Winner
Updated
Updated · Morning Brew · Jun 21

CFTC Seeks Comment on Reality-Show Betting After $32.7 Million Hit Survivor Winner

3 articles · Updated · Morning Brew · Jun 21

Summary

  • The CFTC last week opened a public-comment process to clarify whether prediction markets tied to reality competition shows fall under its jurisdiction.
  • The review follows a run of spoiled finales and insider-trading concerns, including Survivor 50 winner Aubry Bracco trading at 61% before the season premiered and drawing $32.7 million in bets before the finale.
  • Kalshi said it investigated the Survivor market and found no evidence of insider trading, which its rules prohibit, even as host Jeff Probst accused platforms of incentivizing people to "lie, cheat, and steal."
  • The issue extends beyond Survivor: markets correctly called winners on The Masked Singer and Next Level Chef, while Polymarket's Golden Globes partnership picked 26 of 28 winners earlier this year.

Insights

Is betting on Survivor's winner a sophisticated financial trade or simply an illegal wager?
How can Hollywood protect its secrets when spoilers are now worth millions on prediction markets?
With billions at stake, who should regulate prediction markets: federal agencies or state governments?