HR-9082-119
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Sponsored by Eugene Vindman (D-VA)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of Defense to issue regulations, within 180 days of enactment, prohibiting active-duty members of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, and Space Force, as well as civilian Department of Defense employees, from participating in prediction market transactions when they possess — or could reasonably obtain through their official duties — material nonpublic information relevant to those transactions. It would also require those regulations to specify a range of punishments for violations.
Who benefits
The general public and prediction market participants who do not have access to privileged government information, as the bill would create a more level playing field. Prediction market platforms that could face reputational or regulatory risk from insider trading activity. Taxpayers and citizens who have an interest in DoD personnel not profiting from classified or sensitive government information. Whistleblowers and ethics watchdog organizations that have sought clearer rules in this area.
Who is hurt
Active-duty military members and DoD civilian employees who currently participate in prediction markets and would face new restrictions or potential punishment. Personnel in roles with broad access to sensitive information — such as intelligence analysts, logistics officers, or senior planners — who may find it difficult to determine whether their knowledge qualifies as "material nonpublic information," creating legal uncertainty. Prediction market operators who may lose a segment of users. Legal and compliance offices within DoD that would bear the administrative burden of drafting, implementing, and enforcing the new regulations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that DoD personnel routinely handle sensitive information — troop movements, procurement decisions, geopolitical assessments — that could directly affect prediction market outcomes on topics like military conflicts, defense contracts, or foreign policy events, creating a structural advantage unavailable to ordinary participants. They contend that without explicit rules, there is no clear deterrent against this form of insider trading, and that the bill closes a gap that existing securities law does not cover because prediction markets are not traditional securities exchanges. The bill's use of the established "material nonpublic information" standard from securities law provides a familiar, tested legal framework for enforcement.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's definition of "material nonpublic information" is broad enough to create serious ambiguity — nearly any DoD employee could "reasonably obtain" sensitive information in the course of their duties, potentially chilling lawful participation in legal markets even for personnel with no actual access to relevant data. They contend that existing military ethics regulations, the Uniform Code of Military Justice, and federal conflict-of-interest statutes may already cover this conduct, making a new layer of regulation redundant and adding compliance costs without meaningfully changing behavior. Critics may also argue that the bill delegates significant discretion to the Secretary of Defense to define punishments, with limited congressional oversight of how those penalties are structured or applied.