New Super Bowl Rumors Further Expose Prediction Markets’ Insider Trading Problem

Fraternity betting rings and suspicious Super Bowl trades have reignited scrutiny over insider trading on prediction market platforms Kalshi and Polymarket.
Prediction markets had their biggest moment yet during Super Bowl LX. Together, Kalshi and Polymarket recorded nearly $1.2 billion in combined trading volume over Super Bowl weekend.
However, the record-breaking figures were quickly overshadowed by something far more damaging: a wave of insider trading allegations that exposed a fundamental vulnerability in how these platforms operate.
The Fraternity Betting Ring
The most widely reported incident involved college students at the University of Miami. Students at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, where Evan Whitesell, Jeff Bezos’s stepson, is a member, began placing bets that Bezos would not attend the Super Bowl.
As information spread through group chats and alumni networks, the probability that Bezos would attend on Kalshi reportedly fell from around 70% to roughly 30%.
A second incident unfolded at Clemson University. Based on false rumors circulating in group chats, a market around actor Mark Wahlberg attending generated more than $24 million in trading volume. The rumor began at Clemson University fraternities, where Wahlberg’s daughter, Ella, is a student. However, Wahlberg ultimately did not show up, leaving those who bet on his attendance with significant losses.
Suspicious Trades on the Halftime Show
Fraternity rumors were only part of the story. An anonymous day-old Polymarket account correctly predicted 17 out of approximately 20 bets about the Super Bowl halftime show, including that Lady Gaga, Cardi B, and Ricky Martin would perform during Bad Bunny’s set. Statistically, that success rate strongly suggests the account had some form of insider knowledge.
A potential Super Bowl halftime show insider has been spotted.
— haeju.eth (@JeongHaeju) February 8, 2026
This wallet was created yesterday and is exclusivly trading Super Bowl halftime show markets.
It currently has $47K deployed and is the largest holder in the Lady Gaga market with 22K shares.
Across every position:… pic.twitter.com/muVR5OzaVs
A brand new account created less than 24 hours before the Super Bowl allegedly bet exclusively on halftime props and reportedly hit every single one. Accounts also wagered hundreds of thousands of dollars on Lady Gaga appearing before it was publicly announced. Polymarket did not publicly comment on the matter.
A Pattern Bigger Than the Super Bowl
These incidents did not emerge in isolation. Reports surfaced that several accounts made around $1.2 million in profits on Polymarket after placing bets predicting U.S. military action against Iran, with most trades reportedly placed hours before the strikes.
Just before the US strike on Iran, a surge of suspiciously timed bets on prediction markets triggered fresh insider trading alarms. Funds that let investors mirror the stock trades of Congress are under scrutiny. Tidal Financial Group’s Dan Weiskopf said ‘the grift continues’ pic.twitter.com/LlCnEsmJDs
— Reuters (@Reuters) March 3, 2026
The controversy deepened as many industry insiders and analysts questioned whether “invasion” and “death” contracts should even be an option on prediction markets in the first place.
In January, a trader earned over $400,000 on Polymarket after placing bets that Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro would be removed from power, shortly before reports of an operation targeting him emerged. Polymarket also made headlines for refusing to pay out some of these contracts due to discrepancies between the language of the yes/no contracts and what exactly constitutes an “invasion”.
Blockchain analysis of 1.7 million Polymarket addresses found that 70% of users lost money, while just 0.04% of accounts captured 70% of total profits. That concentration raises a pointed question: are those top traders simply better researchers, or do some hold informational advantages that most users cannot access?
Kalshi Takes Action, Polymarket Stays Quiet
The two platforms have responded very differently to the scrutiny. Kalshi cracked down on insider trading, fining and suspending a former California gubernatorial candidate and an employee of MrBeast for suspicious activity on its platform.
That marked the first time any major prediction market publicly disclosed insider trading enforcement actions.
Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour outlined a new surveillance detection system that flags suspicious patterns in real time using pattern-recognition models. The company also confirmed it maintains a market regulation team that conducts investigations and reviews customer identity data.
Polymarket, by contrast, has largely stayed silent on the insider trading question.
The Regulatory Gray Zone
At the heart of the problem is a structural one. There are laws that prohibit insider trading on prediction markets, just as on traditional financial markets. However, industry experts are skeptical that the CFTC, recently reduced in staff as part of widespread government cuts, has the will or the means to police those problems.
Prediction markets are regulated federally as event contracts under CFTC oversight, not by state gambling commissions.
As a result, the enforcement infrastructure that governs traditional sportsbooks does not apply here. Kalshi alone is currently facing 19 lawsuits, including from state gaming commissions and attorneys general who describe prediction markets as unlicensed sports gambling.
The Super Bowl controversy has only added fuel to that legal fire.
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