Beast Industries has suspended an employee while it internally investigates allegations of insider trading, CEO Jeff Housenbold said on Thursday, one day after the video editor for YouTube star MrBeast was fined and suspended by prediction markets platform Kalshi.
The move was made following consultation with the company’s chief compliance officer, Housenbold said during an appearance on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” describing Beast Industries’ approach to addressing risks that predictions markets pose as proactive.
A few months ago, Housenbold said that he put policies in place making it clear to employees and contestants participating in the firm’s reality competition series that “we don’t want anyone to trade on information,” regardless of ambiguities surrounding the law.
On Wednesday, Kalshi said that it had fined and suspended Artem Kaptur, an editor working for MrBeast, after determining that he likely abused knowledge of what would take place in the YouTube star’s videos to conduct “near-perfect trading” on its platform. The prediction market issued the individual a $20,000 fine, while suspending Kaptur from Kalshi for two years.
A Beast Industries spokesperson told Decrypt that the company isn’t providing additional comment on Kalshi’s findings or the employee’s suspension at this time.
They referred Decrypt to a previous statement, in which they said the firm “has no tolerance for this behavior,” as well as a post from someone claiming to be Kaptur on X.
In the since-deleted post, the individual described their actions as “stupid, shortsighted, and a violation of the trust that was placed in me,” but they argued that the repercussions were overblown. They also said they were raising money for a purported defense, following a slew of X users offering to send him cryptocurrency.
The person claiming to be Kaptur said they lost their job and their career, a hefty price to pay for a “small bet” on a platform that is purportedly still figuring out its own rules. Kalshi found that Kaptur wagered a total of $4,000 on markets related to MrBeast’s videos.
“I am not saying that excuses what I did,” they added. “I am saying that being made an example of in a space where the rules are still being written is a deeply disorienting experience.”
Kalshi referred Kaptur’s conduct to the CFTC, which has firmly positioned itself as the exclusive regulator of prediction markets. The same goes for Kyle Langford, who engaged in market manipulation by wagering on his California gubernatorial bid, Kalshi said on Wednesday.
Some experts argue that prediction markets are most accurate when anyone is able to participate, but that sentiment isn’t shared among lawmakers and critics who argue that insider trading is eroding trust in markets while challenging their overall fairness.
In his Thursday appearance, Housenbold said that prediction markets will have to police themselves, but there are questions over whether states should also play a role amid a growing list of lawsuits in states like Nevada and Massachusetts.
“It is ripe for abuse,” Housenbold said of prediction markets. “There’s so much information out there, and it’s asymmetric, and people are taking advantage of it.”
decrypt.co