ReutersBetting platform Kalshi has come under scrutiny for insider trading issuesPeople looking to place certain bets on prediction market operator Kalshi will soon have to reveal where they work in an attempt to stop insider trading, the firm has said.
The platform – which lets users bet against each other on elections, sporting events, and culture – said Tuesday it will start to collect work information from users attempting to place bets that could benefit from insider information.
Kalshi said the rule will apply to "markets with heightened insider or manipulation risk." It used as an example a possible trade on whether OpenAI or Anthropic will go public first.
Prediction markets face growing concerns around insider trading as they continue to surge in popularity.
Former Congressman George Santos is currently being investigated for alleged insider trading on Kalshi, according to NPR.
And earlier this year, Kalshi said it had discovered candidates for Congress from Minnesota, Texas, and Virginia were betting on their own races.
Kalshi said that in the first quarter of this year, it made more than 20 referrals to law enforcement of possibly illegal trading activity after opening more than 150 of its own investigations.
Last month, a Google employee was charged with insider trading for using company information to place bets on Polymarket, a rival prediction market operator.
And earlier this year, a US special forces soldier was found to have allegedly made successful bets on the platform regarding the removal operation of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. He has pleaded not guilty.
By requiring more information from users about where they work, Kalshi said it will be able to "identify presumptive insiders… and screen them out before a trade is ever placed."
Kalshi said it has also developed a new risk scoring method in order to identify betting markets that appear more at risk of manipulation or insider trading, including those that pertain to specific companies and national security matters.
