President Trump’s denunciation of prediction markets landed with a built-in contradiction: he called the industry “somewhat of a casino” after a soldier was indicted for trading on classified information, even as his family stands to profit from the same market. The White House has warned staff not to trade on government secrets, but the president’s own media company and Donald Trump Jr.’s ties to top platforms leave the message looking shaky.
That tension matters because the business is no longer a niche side bet. Prediction markets are now handling billions of dollars in weekly volume, and the CFTC, which polices them, has been cut to its smallest workforce in 15 years, down 24 percent since Trump returned to office, according to latest agency data.
The enforcement pressure is already showing up in real cases. Federal authorities last week charged a U.S. special forces soldier in the Maduro raid case, saying he made more than $400,000 from a timely bet, while the CFTC separately sued to claw back gains and bar him from trading. That leaves the agency trying to police a fast-growing product line with fewer lawyers, fewer commissioners, and, in Chicago, an enforcement office that Barron’s reported had fallen from 20 lawyers to zero.
What happens next turns on whether Congress gives the agency more money or new rules, and whether the current administration wants tougher limits at all. CFTC chair Michael Selig has asked for 108 enforcement employees, down from 140 filled positions last year, while lawmakers are pushing a bill to bar presidents, appointees and their families from betting on government actions, setting up the next fight as soon as the proposal reaches the Hill.