The explosion of prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket has caught the attention of Wall Street’s compliance departments. Major financial institutions are moving quickly to implement strict rules regarding whether their employees can wager on real-world outcomes, ranging from political elections to economic indicators.
According to people familiar with the matter, several top-tier banks have explicitly banned or heavily restricted staff from participating in these platforms due to growing concerns over conflicts of interest, regulatory scrutiny, and the potential misuse of non-public information.
The Conflict of Interest Dilemma
Prediction markets allow users to buy and sell “shares” in the outcome of future events. If the event happens, the contract pays out; if it doesn’t, it expires worthless. While this looks like gambling to some, economists view it as a form of derivative trading.
This structural similarity is precisely what is causing a headache for Wall Street compliance teams. Banks routinely handle sensitive macroeconomic data, corporate merger details, and government policy insights before they are made public.
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The Core Risk: If a researcher or trader has early access to non-public economic reports or policy shifts, they could easily log onto a prediction market and place a highly profitable wager on inflation rates, interest rate decisions, or election outcomes.
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Regulatory Heat: Financial institutions are legally obligated to monitor and prevent insider trading. Allowing employees to trade on platforms that fall outside traditional equity or commodities tracking frameworks creates a massive regulatory blind spot.
The Emerging Rules of Engagement
Compliance frameworks across major broker-dealers are taking two distinct approaches to handle the risk:
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Total Banning: Some banks are taking a zero-tolerance approach, classifying prediction markets under their broad prohibitions against unauthorized gambling and external personal trading accounts.
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Pre-Clearance Mandates: Other firms are treating prediction contracts like traditional stocks. Under this model, employees must declare their accounts, and every single “bet” must be pre-cleared by a compliance officer to ensure it doesn’t overlap with the employee’s professional coverage area.
The Road Ahead
The clampdown highlights a broader tension between legacy financial regulations and new-age, decentralized platforms. While prediction platforms argue they offer valuable data by leveraging the “wisdom of the crowd,” Wall Street is making its position clear: when it comes to combining insider financial access with speculative event betting, the risks are simply too high to tolerate.
