MrBeast editor nabbed by prediction market firm Kalshi for alleged insider trading
TL;DR
Kalshi suspended and fined two users for insider trading, including a MrBeast editor who bet on show outcomes. Beast Industries is investigating its employee, highlighting prediction market enforcement challenges.
Key Takeaways
- •Kalshi penalized two users for insider trading, including MrBeast editor Artem Kaptur who made $4,000 in trades on show content.
- •Beast Industries is investigating Kaptur and criticized Kalshi's communication, while Kalshi has over a dozen active insider-trading cases.
- •The cases underscore CFTC's regulatory challenges with global prediction markets, as Kalshi's CEO acknowledges enforcement complexities.

What to know:
- Kalshi accused two users of insider trading, including an employee of popular streaming and reality show star MrBeast who was said to make trades on the content of his shows.
- The prediction market firm suspended and fined the two users, and Beast Industries told CoinDesk it's investigating the situation with its employee.
- The Commodity Futures Trading Commission issued an advisory noting Kalshi's action and citing the cases as potential violations of law, and the agency's chairman called exchanges such as Kalshi the "first line of defense" against insider trading.
- Kalshi accused two users of insider trading, including an employee of popular streaming and reality show star MrBeast who was said to make trades on the content of his shows.
- The prediction market firm suspended and fined the two users, and Beast Industries told CoinDesk it's investigating the situation with its employee.
- The Commodity Futures Trading Commission issued an advisory noting Kalshi's action and citing the cases as potential violations of law, and the agency's chairman called exchanges such as Kalshi the "first line of defense" against insider trading.
Kalshi, one of the leading prediction market firms, said it caught and penalized two users for insider-trading activity on its platform, including an editor for the popular social-media star MrBeast.
The company said it has more than a dozen active insider-trading cases among 200 it's investigated. On Wednesday, Kalshi disclosed the details of two that it resolved, including against Artem Kaptur, who was identified as working for James Donaldson, known for his MrBeast persona that's tied to its massive social-media presence as well as the reality competition show, "Beast Games."
Kaptur was said to have entered $4,000 in trades regarding what would occur on the MrBeast show, for which he worked as a visual effects editor. Kalshi suspended him for two years and fined him more than $20,000.
"Beast Industries has no tolerance for this behavior, whether by contestants or our own employees," the company that employed Kaptur said in a statement. "We have a longstanding policy in place against employees using proprietary company information which safeguards the highest standards and ethics throughout our organization."
Beast Industries said it has "already initiated an independent investigation" on that matter, though it encouraged Kalshi to "be more open" to communicating its findings in the future.
Insider trading is banned at Kalshi, a regulated exchange licensed as a "designated contract market" with the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), and the company described its actions against Kaptur and another user who took advantage of their unique knowledge in violation of user policy.
In the other case, user Kyle Langford was said to bet $200 on his own candidacy for California governor and posted about it on social media, earning him a 5-year ban and a penalty of 10 times the trade amount.
Langford, now running for Congress, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
The CFTC issued a related advisory on Wednesday, noting Kalshi's internal enforcement had handled bother matters and adding that the regulator can "investigate and prosecute violations" when it deems its involvement appropriate. The agency suggested both instances may have violated U.S. law
"Our exchanges are the CFTC’s first line of defense in policing insider trading in prediction markets," CFTC Chairman Mike Selig said in a post on social media site X, adding that he was "pleased" to see Kalshi act. "Let me be clear: if you attempt to engage in manipulation, fraud, or insider trading, we will find you and take action."
While it's not detailed in Kalshi's member agreement, fines and suspensions like those given in the two cases are mapped out deep within Kalshi's corporate "rule book," and the determination of penalties allows the company to fine a member at a level "sufficient to deter recidivism" — meaning enough to keep people from doing it again.
The pair of cases at Kalshi further underline one of the concerns at the U.S. regulator of derivatives, the CFTC. While that agency is now working on rules to govern the prediction markets, its previous chairman under the administration of former President Joe Biden had often lamented that the CFTC isn't able to police the whole world. Markets that extend to miniscule bets on topics both broad and obscure and in jurisdictions around the world can pose a potential challenge for — at last count — about 114 U.S. enforcement employees.
In a recent CNBC interview, Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour struggled to draw the line on what constitutes insider trading when questioned on a hypothetical example of people in the stadium before the Super Bowl having knowledge about what performer Bad Bunny would do as his opening song — a matter that drew Kalshi contracts.
Mansour equated it with controls at stock market firms, saying, "we do the same thing on Kalshi. We have the same mechanism for enforcement." However, he said Kalshi users have to recognize the risks of betting on information under uncertain restraints. "We want to work with policymakers and regulators to get that right," he said.
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UPDATE (February 25, 2026, 19:54 UTC): Adds reference to Kalshi's corporate policies.
UPDATE (February 25, 2026, 21:13 UTC): Adds CFTC advisory related to the action.
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