Kansikuva näyttelystä LexBeyond

LexBeyond

Podcast by by Lexicon Labs & Alper Ozgit

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Hear Law Differently. www.lexbeyond.com

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24 jaksot

jakson When Sports Trading Attempted On-Exchange - Ep. 24 kansikuva

When Sports Trading Attempted On-Exchange - Ep. 24

Key Takeaways 1. ErisX’s “risk‑management” products were indistinguishable from classic sports bets Lex and Bianca emphasize that ErisX’s self‑certified contracts—moneylines, point spreads, and over/unders—mirrored casino wagers so closely that “the products they certified sound exactly like a weekend in Vegas.” 2. Regulators saw the move as a covert attempt to smuggle sports betting into a federally regulated exchange The hosts explain that “for many observers, and regulators included, this was a blatant, thinly veiled attempt to wedge sports gambling onto a regulated commodities exchange.” ErisX tried to rebrand sports bets as corporate hedging tools for sportsbooks, stadium operators, and even hot‑dog vendors—but the underlying structure still looked like gambling dressed up in derivatives terminology. 3. To avoid being labeled a gambling platform, ErisX imposed a massive restriction that ultimately doomed the proposal To prove they weren’t enabling retail sports betting, ErisX banned the public from participating entirely. Only Eligible Contract Participants (“ECPs”)—licensed sportsbooks, commercial vendors, and entities with $10M+ in discretionary investments—could trade. 4. The retail lockout created a fatal contradiction in market design Lex and Bianca highlight that hedgers need speculators to take the opposite side of trades. By excluding retail traders, ErisX created a market with no natural liquidity providers. This design flaw triggered a regulatory collision: Commissioner Berkovitz argued that ErisX’s structure violated Core Principle 2 (impartial access) and Core Principle 19 (anti‑competitive behavior). 5. ErisX’s filing accidentally exposed a deeper legal contradiction in U.S. sports betting By arguing that NFL outcomes are “commodities,” ErisX inadvertently implied that every state‑regulated sportsbook was facilitating illegal off‑exchange swaps every time a customer placed a bet. This created a jurisdictional nightmare for the CFTC, not because they lacked the power to shut down state-regulated sportsbooks, but because they didn’t want to. The agency had the law on its side, but not the political appetite to wage war against a multi‑billion‑dollar, state‑sanctioned industry. Ultimately, ErisX withdrew its certification on Day 89—one day before the CFTC’s review deadline—preventing a formal rejection but leaving behind a blueprint for the regulatory battles that would later engulf Kalshi. Our next episode will highlight how the 2026 CFTC is greenlighting the ErisX playbook for Kalshi and other prediction markets. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.lexbeyond.com/subscribe [https://www.lexbeyond.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

21. touko 2026 - 20 min
jakson When Sports Trading Went Off-Exchange - Ep. 23 kansikuva

When Sports Trading Went Off-Exchange - Ep. 23

Key Takeaways 1. Intrade Began as a Wall Street Epiphany Two commodities traders realized the math behind futures contracts didn’t care what the asset was — meaning a football team could be traded just like orange juice futures. This insight sparked the creation of Intrade and later Tradesports, reshaping how people priced uncertain future events. 2. Saddam Hussein’s Capture Proved Markets Could Detect Hidden Truths In 2003, Tradesports contracts on Saddam’s capture spiked two days before the news broke. Someone with inside knowledge likely used the market to profit — demonstrating how prediction markets act as real‑time “truth vacuums” that surface secret information through price movement. 3. Intrade Outperformed Pollsters in the 2004 Election The platform performed very well, beating traditional polling by financially punishing bias and rewarding informed traders. It became a case study in why markets can outperform experts when money forces honesty. 4. The Rise of Algorithms Threatened the Wisdom‑of‑Crowds Model Nate Silver’s 2008 statistical success created a paradox: Once a dominant model exists, traders simply follow it, destroying the diversity of thought that prediction markets rely on. When everyone uses the same “shortcut,” the market stops discovering truth. 5. John Delaney’s Everest Tragedy Exposed the Human Limits of Rational Markets Delaney — the architect who kept the exchange alive — died 100 feet from Everest’s summit, never knowing his daughter had been born days earlier. His death triggered financial chaos and revealed missing customer funds, underscoring the episode’s final theme: Sometimes, markets fail not because of math, but because humans are never fully rational. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.lexbeyond.com/subscribe [https://www.lexbeyond.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

5. touko 2026 - 24 min
jakson When Sports Trading Was a Crime - Ep. 22 kansikuva

When Sports Trading Was a Crime - Ep. 22

⭐ Key Takeaways This episode exposes the staggering functional identicality between Jay Cohen’s 1990s event‑trading exchange and today’s CFTC‑regulated prediction markets—raising the uncomfortable question: How is he a felon when Kalshi has a $22 billion valuation? Lex & Bianca unpack the “geographic irony so bitter you couldn’t write it in a script”: The U.S. government convicted Cohen of a federal felony, stripped his freedom, and locked him in a cage in the only state where the exact activity he built is universally and enthusiastically legal. The conversation shows how the categorization of an event contract—gambling vs. financial instrument—dictates whether you ring the bell at the NYSE or get shipped to a federal prison camp in Nevada. The episode traces how identical market mechanics—binary pricing, spreads, real‑time trading—produced opposite legal outcomes solely because the Department of Justice of one decade criminalized what the CFTC of another decade now authorizes. Lex & Bianca drive home the haunting thesis: The line between visionary and felon is sometimes just what decade it is—and Jay Cohen’s story may be the clearest proof of that in modern financial history. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.lexbeyond.com/subscribe [https://www.lexbeyond.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

22. huhti 2026 - 28 min
jakson From News to Numbers - Ep. 21 kansikuva

From News to Numbers - Ep. 21

🔑 Key Takeaways Mainstream media could turn into a laundering mechanism for manipulated probabilities: The episode’s most explosive insight is that once prediction‑market data appears on CNN, Fox, CNBC, or The Wall Street Journal, it undergoes a transformation. Prediction markets introduce a new vector for engineered influence over public perception—and potentially over democratic outcomes: Because these markets have shallow liquidity, a well‑funded actor can “buy” a probability spike and once that spike appears on a news ticker, it shapes voter psychology, consumer behavior and market sentiment. Newsrooms are now forced to navigate a deep internal conflict between their own proprietary research and live crowdsourced data: Legacy outlets have spent decades building polling divisions, forecasting models, and editorial standards. Prediction markets bulldoze that infrastructure. Media–market partnerships are accelerating faster than the regulatory framework can keep up: While CNN, CNBC, Fox, Dow Jones outlets and even Bloomberg have already integrated Kalshi or Polymarket data, America is still fighting over the foundational question: Is this finance or gambling? Editorial independence is being stress‑tested in real time: The CNBC example—where anchors aggressively questioned Kalshi’s CEO despite their parent company being a minority investor—shows the firewall can hold. But the episode warns that this integrity depends on individual journalists, not structural safeguards. Smaller networks, local affiliates and financially strained outlets may not withstand the same pressures. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.lexbeyond.com/subscribe [https://www.lexbeyond.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

9. huhti 2026 - 18 min
jakson Prediction Markets: The Next Campaign Issue? - Ep. 20 kansikuva

Prediction Markets: The Next Campaign Issue? - Ep. 20

🔑 Key Takeaways Prediction markets are colliding with real‑world danger: Lex and Bianca open with the chilling example of Israeli journalist Emanuel Fabian, who received death threats simply for reporting on a missile strike tied to a Polymarket contract. Washington is suddenly treating prediction markets like a political powder keg: Despite most Americans probably not knowing what Polymarket is, lawmakers are pushing bipartisan bills to restrict or ban event contracts. Three potential scandals could make prediction markets a serious campaign issue: ** Insider‑trading optics ** A major sports‑betting scandal ** Physical harm Two competing political narratives are forming fast: Same product, radically different interpretations. The episode ends with a provocative question: “At what point do the bets themselves stop just predicting events and start actively changing them?” This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.lexbeyond.com/subscribe [https://www.lexbeyond.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

27. maalis 2026 - 5 min
Loistava design ja vihdoin on helppo löytää podcasteja, joista oikeasti tykkää
Loistava design ja vihdoin on helppo löytää podcasteja, joista oikeasti tykkää
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