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The U.S. prediction market is facing a strict regulatory policy test. Recently, 30 Democratic lawmakers (including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi) jointly supported a legislative proposal called the "2026 Financial Prediction Market Public Integrity Act," which directly targets insider trading risks in prediction platforms.
The trigger for this regulatory action stemmed from suspicious trading activity on a leading prediction platform. A new account with only $32,000 accurately bet on a political figure stepping down at a specific time point, ultimately earning over $400,000 in profit, with a return rate of 1242%. The timing of the trade closely coincided with U.S. military decision-making, immediately raising suspicions of insider trading.
From the perspective of the bill's design, its regulatory approach is quite strict. It prohibits federal elected officials, political appointees, and administrative staff from using non-public information to participate in any prediction market transactions linked to government policies or political outcomes. This effectively transplant the existing insider trading standards from traditional financial markets directly into the prediction market domain.
For the cryptocurrency industry, this signals a new compliance turning point. Previously, prediction platforms operated at the edge of regulation due to their cross-border nature and relatively anonymous transactions. However, as the industry expands and political attention increases, this gray area is rapidly shrinking. Once the bill passes, prediction market players will face more stringent identity verification requirements, more detailed transaction monitoring, and may even need to establish compliance systems similar to traditional exchanges.
This presents both risks and opportunities for the entire Web3 ecosystem. The risk lies in higher barriers potentially reducing user growth; the opportunity is that increased compliance could attract institutional capital inflows. The future direction of prediction markets largely depends on how the industry balances innovation with regulation.