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US Democrats working on bill to rein in prediction markets after Iran bets

US Democrats working on bill to rein in prediction markets after Iran bets

By Michelle PriceThu, March 5, 2026 at 7:09 PM UTC

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1 / 0U.S. President Biden delivers remarks on the CHIPS and Science Act at Viasat Inc., in CarlsbadFILE PHOTO: U.S. Rep. Mike Levin (D-CA) speaks during a visit to Viasat Inc., in Carlsbad, California, U.S., November 4, 2022. REUTERS/Mike Blake/ File Photo

By Michelle Price

WASHINGTON, March 5 (Reuters) - U.S. Democratic lawmakers Representative Mike Levin and Senator Chris Murphy are working on a bill to rein in prediction markets ‌after well-timed bets ahead of the U.S.-Israeli air strikes in Iran stoked concerns ‌over the legality and ethics of such trades, Levin told Reuters.

While the effort is unlikely to become law ​in the near future, it intensifies pressure on the likes of Polymarket and Kalshi amid growing concerns wagers on the platforms create incentives to foment conflict and disclose classified information.

"Chris Murphy and I are working on this. It's unbelievably clear to me that if anyone is using ‌prior knowledge of military action ⁠for financial gain that should be absolutely illegal," the California congressman said in an interview.

The Commodity Exchange Act bars event contracts that are deemed “contrary ⁠to the public interest,” including those involving war, terrorism, or assassination, but that law still gives prediction markets far too much leeway, said Levin.

On Wednesday, Polymarket removed bets on the likelihood of ​a nuclear ​explosion anywhere in the world after online backlash.

"There ​is no good way for people ‌to be betting on war and death," said Levin, adding other Democratic lawmakers share his concerns and he hopes to build a coalition around the effort.

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Last month, six other Democratic senators called out the platforms after a mystery trader made a roughly $410,000 profit betting on the ouster of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

On Saturday, analytics firm Bubblemaps flagged that six accounts ‌made a $1.2 million profit from Polymarket bets on the ​ousting of Iran's Supreme Leader Khamenei just hours before ​he was killed in the air ​strikes.

Responding on X, Levin and Murphy said the trades suggested insiders ‌were profiting from the war. Murphy added ​such trades should not ​be legal and that he planned to introduce legislation "ASAP."

Spokespeople for Murphy and Polymarket did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

A spokesperson for Kalshi said the platform bans ​and enforces against insider trading. "We ‌also don't list markets directly tied to death."

Polymarket, which mostly operates overseas, has ​said prediction markets harness the wisdom of crowds to create accurate, unbiased ​forecasts.

(Reporting by Michelle Price, Editing by Nick Zieminski)

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Source: “AOL Money”

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