Prediction market platform Kalshi is expanding its compliance framework through a new partnership with StarCompliance, giving financial institutions greater oversight of employee trading activity as interest in prediction markets continues to rise.
The collaboration is designed to help banks, hedge funds, and other financial firms monitor employee participation on Kalshi in real time. By connecting Kalshi accounts with StarCompliance’s monitoring platform, employers can identify potentially suspicious trading activity and ensure staff comply with internal trading policies.
The move comes as prediction markets attract more institutional attention, bringing increased concerns about insider trading and the misuse of confidential information.
New System Gives Employers Better Trade Oversight
Under the new arrangement, employees at companies that use StarCompliance will be required to disclose and link their Kalshi accounts. Once connected, compliance teams can review employee trading activity in much the same way they already monitor stock and derivatives trading.
Rather than preventing employees from participating in prediction markets, the system focuses on improving transparency. Compliance officers can monitor transactions, identify unusual activity, and ensure employees follow company rules.
Kelvin Dickenson, Chief Product Officer at StarCompliance, explained that businesses can allow employees to trade on prediction markets while making account disclosure a mandatory requirement. According to Dickenson, companies can tell employees they are free to participate, provided they first register their accounts with compliance teams.
At present, the integration primarily tracks trading activity after accounts have been linked. However, Dickenson said additional compliance tools could be added in the future if clients request them. These may include pre-trade approval requirements before employees are allowed to place prediction market trades.
Kalshi Expands Compliance Efforts
The StarCompliance partnership follows several recent steps by Kalshi aimed at strengthening market integrity.
Earlier this month, the company introduced new employer disclosure requirements for traders participating in markets considered more vulnerable to insider trading. It also launched a whistleblower reporting channel and implemented a risk-scoring process that reviews every proposed market before it goes live.
Kalshi reported conducting more than 150 investigations during the first quarter of 2026. During the same period, it blocked over 100 suspected insider-trading attempts and referred 20 cases to law enforcement authorities.
The company believes stronger compliance measures are becoming increasingly important as prediction markets continue to gain popularity among retail and institutional investors alike.
Institutional Demand Driving the Integration
Kalshi says the new integration was developed in response to requests from major financial firms looking to participate in prediction markets while maintaining strict compliance standards.
Max Crowley, Vice President of Business Development at Kalshi, said the company is “obsessed with compliance” and views robust monitoring systems as essential for working with large financial institutions.
Crowley revealed that discussions with a major New York hedge fund helped inspire the partnership. The fund wanted to hedge risk through a Kalshi institutional account but was unable to proceed because the platform did not integrate with StarCompliance. That conversation highlighted a key requirement for institutional adoption and accelerated the development of the new integration.
Prediction Markets Face Greater Regulatory Scrutiny
The partnership also arrives as regulators increase their focus on prediction market activity and potential insider trading.
Earlier this month, NPR reported that the U.S. Department of Justice and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission were investigating former U.S. Representative George Santos after Kalshi detected suspicious trading linked to a market involving President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address. According to the report, Kalshi froze the account involved and referred the matter to authorities.
Federal prosecutors have also pursued separate investigations involving prediction market platform Polymarket. One case involves a U.S. Army Special Forces soldier accused of using classified information to trade contracts related to former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. Another case centers on a Google software engineer accused of using confidential company information to trade Google-related prediction market contracts.
As institutional participation continues to grow, Kalshi’s latest partnership signals that compliance and transparency are becoming key priorities for the future development of prediction markets.
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