On Wednesday, online betting platform Kalshi announced that it was suspending the profile of Artem Kaptur, an editor working for YouTuber MrBeast, for two years, in addition to imposing a fine of more than $20,000.
According to Kalshi, the videographer used privileged information to place bets related to his employer’s upcoming videos. Artem Kaptur is accused of betting approximately $4,000 on predictions about “YouTube streaming.”
On Kalshi, it is possible, for example, to bet on what MrBeast will say in his next video or on the identity of the winner of “Beast Games,” the YouTuber’s reality TV series.
Beast Industries has "zero tolerance for this behavior."
Kalshi’s internal systems reportedly flagged Kaptur’s profile after he achieved “near-perfect” and “statistically abnormal” gains.
Users of the platform also alerted the company to the video editor’s suspicious activities. A spokesperson for “Beast Industries,” the entertainment company founded by MrBeast, said it had “zero tolerance for this behavior, whether it comes from [their] participants or [their] own employees.”
The company has a policy prohibiting the use of non-public information. It said it has launched an independent investigation into Kaptur’s case.
Jimmy Donaldson, aka MrBeast, is known for organizing extreme challenges and offering huge sums of money in his videos. He is the most popular YouTuber in the world, with 469 million subscribers on the platform. Adding the subscribers from his other channels (Beast Philanthropy, MrBeast Gaming, BeastReacts, and MrBeast2), he has a total of 600 million. According to Celebrity Net Worth, his fortune is estimated at $2.6 billion in 2026.
Kalshi sanctions a Republican politician
This is the first time Kalshi has publicly disclosed the results of an investigation into market manipulation on its website. On Wednesday, it also made public a separate case involving Kyle Langford, a Republican who ran for governor of California last year.
Langford had bet on his own candidacy on the platform. Kalshi pointed out that these transactions, which Langford had promoted on social media, violated rules prohibiting political candidates from betting on their own elections.
Langford was fined more than $2,000 and had his account suspended for five years.
Kalshi has opened 200 investigations
The company reported both cases to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the regulator for insider trading in the United States.
“No financial exchange is immune to malicious actors. Neither stock exchanges, banks, nor prediction markets,” Bobby DeNault, head of enforcement at Kalshi, said Wednesday.
“We are committed to deterring and rooting out fraudsters, manipulators, and those who deliberately cheat,” he added. The company also said it had opened 200 investigations into potential violations of its trading rules over the past year. More than a dozen of these have become “active cases.”
The rise of online betting
The online betting market is experiencing rapid growth in the United States. Sports betting remains the most popular form of gambling. However, platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket have seen their popularity skyrocket by offering bets on various areas in addition to sports, including politics, economics, weather, election results, etc.
Kalshi is one of many event betting platforms that emerged after the Supreme Court legalized online gambling in 2018. The number of monthly active users of Kalshi is expected to grow from 600,000 to 5.1 million in 2025, according to Forbes. A fundraising round in late 2025 even valued the company at $11 billion.
Kalshi founders now billionaires
According to Bloomberg, the total amount of transactions carried out on Kalshi in January amounted to nearly $10 billion, of which more than $8.5 billion was related to sports betting.
The Kalshi website was founded in 2018 by Tarek Mansour and Luana Lopes Lara. Today, each of them is worth around $1.3 billion, according to Forbes.
Lopes Lara, a former professional ballerina, is also the youngest self-made female billionaire in the world.
Regulation of prediction markets still unclear
Sites such as Kalshi are the subject of dozens of federal lawsuits seeking to have them regulated as federal financial exchanges, in the same way as sports betting platforms licensed by the states.as state-licensed sports betting platforms. Indeed, regulations are currently much more vague for prediction markets compared to stock markets. Recently, a bettor pocketed nearly half a million dollars on the capture of the Venezuelan president just before the official announcement, raising questions about the use of confidential information concerning the US operation, reports the BBC.
Prediction markets have been closely monitored under the Biden administration. That said, they are receiving a more favorable reception under Donald Trump’s presidency, according to the BBC. Donald Trump Jr., the son of the US president, serves as an advisor to Kalshi and Polymarket.