Sports betting should be regulated as a financial product, not gambling, aspiring prediction market provider says
Novig CEO Jacob Fortinsky said his company will transition to a federal Designated Contract Market framework this summer to launch in all 50 states, while 57 Maiden’s Adam Mastrelli said he was banned from two major sportsbooks within two months for being “sharp.”
What to know:
- Novig’s CEO said it will transition this summer from a 35-state sweepstakes product to a federal Designated Contract Market (DCM) framework, going live in all 50 states.
- 57 Maiden’s co-founders were banned from two major sportsbooks within two months for being “sharps,” driving them to prediction markets like Novig.
- Fortinsky believes the federal-state legal fight over sports event contracts is likely to reach the Supreme Court in two to three years.
“Sports betting is really the only industry in the country that regularly limits and bans their power users,” Fortinsky said. He framed sports event contracts as binary financial instruments that “for so long have been treated as a gambling product and instead should really be treated as a financial product.” Globally, he said, sports betting is “a $2 trillion asset class still dominated by these legacy casinos.”
Adam Mastrelli, founder of 57 Maiden, a firm that builds AI-driven trading strategies for prediction markets, validated the critique with personal experience.
“My partner and I got kicked off of two big sportsbooks within two months of trading because we were sharp,” he said, It’s like “LeBron James getting kicked out of the NBA for being too good,” he added.
