Manipulation, Insider Information, and Regulation in Leveraged Event-Linked Markets
TLDR
This paper analyzes how leverage impacts manipulation and informed trading in event-linked markets, proposing a new taxonomy and regulatory recommendations.
Key contributions
- Develops a theoretical framework for leverage's impact on manipulation and informed trading.
- Introduces a two-axis manipulation taxonomy distinguishing market-price from real-world outcome manipulation.
- Analyzes how leverage scales market-price manipulation linearly and shifts outcome manipulation costs.
- Provides a regulatory synthesis across jurisdictions, identifying three arbitrage pathways and 14 recommendations.
Why it matters
This paper is crucial because it addresses previously unexamined questions about the structural impact of leverage in event-linked markets. It provides a novel theoretical framework and practical regulatory insights, offering essential guidance for operators and regulators navigating this complex and evolving financial landscape.
Original Abstract
The introduction of leverage on prediction-market event contracts raises three structurally distinct questions that have not been addressed jointly: how leverage changes manipulation incentives, how it interacts with informed-trading rents, and how regulatory frameworks should respond. This paper develops a theoretical framework for the first two and a synthesis of the existing regulatory landscape for the third. The principal analytical move is a two-axis manipulation taxonomy distinguishing market-price manipulation from real-world outcome manipulation, where the manipulator affects the underlying event itself. Continuous-underlying derivative markets generally do not make outcome manipulation a venue-level payoff channel; event-linked markets do. Within this taxonomy, leverage plays asymmetric roles: it scales market-price manipulation linearly but shifts the cost-benefit threshold for outcome manipulation, and it scales informed-trading rents in three ways (direct multiplication, Sharpe-ratio preservation, detection-cost amortization). Section 7 connects Paper 1's pre-emption and halt-protocol findings (CC-007b, CC-008) to three manipulation channels: pre-emption introduced by the dynamic-margin engine, halt-arbitrage introduced by the resolution-zone halt protocol, and strategic bad-debt-shifting that no engine in Paper 1's framework family addresses. The framework's manipulation-resistance contribution is a re-allocation of attack surface, not a net reduction. The regulatory synthesis covers principal jurisdictions (US, EU, UK, Singapore, offshore) and identifies three regulatory-arbitrage pathways. The paper concludes with 14 recommendations for venue operators, regulatory bodies, and the research community, separated into framework-independent and framework-conditional categories.
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