Why catching insider trading is so tricky nowadays, and just how helpful is it for kids to sleep in?
NPR News ·

You're reading a preview of the brand new newsletter from The Indicator from Planet Money. Once a week, we're curating our favorite stories and insights on business, finance, economics and adding …
You're reading a preview of the brand new newsletter from The Indicator from Planet Money. Once a week, we're curating our favorite stories and insights on business, finance, economics and adding context on why they matter. Subscribe here to get it in your inbox every Friday. Today's Indicator: >$400,000 Insider trading is a problem. So how do we stop it? It's a real profitable time to have access to privileged information. An American soldier allegedly used classified information to turn $33,000 into more than $400,000. But millions of dollars more have been made through eerily well-timed bets on prediction markets like Polymarket. For example, when the U.S. would bomb Iran , or capture Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro. If you're a Congressman with access to this kind of information, it seems illegal to bet on it, right?! It's not so simple. We looked at Polymarket specifically to understand why this is so hard to police. The difficulty comes in how the company is structured. It does have a U.S.-regulated front-end at home. But the REAL action happens on the back-end: a largely anonymous, crypto-based international platform. When big bets are made there, it's harder to see who is actually doing the betting. U.S. Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal doesn't want prediction markets to have it both ways. SO! He introduced legislation to make them act more like regulated sportsbooks (FanDuel, DraftKings, and some other combined word with CapitalLetters). …
Original source: NPR News
Mentioned
Venezuela · California · Democratic · Polymarket · Nicolás Maduro