Financial markets rarely stand still. New products, trading models, and regulatory expectations continually reshape how firms supervise trading activity. The real challenge isn’t keeping pace with change, it’s doing so without rebuilding surveillance and oversight capabilities every time markets evolve.

Meeting the challenge
To meet that challenge, surveillance programs are moving away from static, one-size-fits-all approaches toward more dynamic models that can be calibrated to individual markets and the behaviors of individual traders. Prediction markets are one of the clearest examples of why that flexibility matters. The objective never changes. How firms get there does.
The rapid growth of prediction markets has shown how quickly firms need to adapt to new market structures. Rather than asking whether existing oversight frameworks still apply, firms are drawing from established surveillance principles and applying them to the unique characteristics of prediction markets.
Firms that have already built surveillance for less liquid markets or futures and options markets already have much of the muscle memory prediction markets require. Just like in any other market, firms remain responsible for identifying potentially abusive trading activity, conducting investigations, and documenting decisions in a consistent and defensible manner.
Changing context
Lower liquidity can change the context in which trading activity is evaluated. A pattern that would trigger review on a listed equity might be unremarkable in a thinly traded contract with days left before resolution.
Likewise, the timing and availability of public information can change how investigators interpret the same trading pattern. Those differences don’t require new surveillance principles, but they do require review processes that reflect the characteristics of the market being monitored rather than applying identical expectations across every product.
Incorporating that context improves the quality of investigations and helps firms build more accurate and defensible outcomes. Putting this approach into practice at scale presents its own challenges. Compliance teams are already overseeing a broader range of products, data, and trading activity. Every additional system introduces more training, staffing demands, investigations, and operational complexity.
Technology should help firms build on the surveillance programs they already trust, extending existing capabilities while preserving the workflows and institutional knowledge they’ve already built.
Tomorrow’s conversation
Prediction markets may be today’s conversation, but they won’t be the last market structure change firms need to prepare for.
Whether the next shift comes through new products, trading models, or regulation, firms that take a reactive surveillance approach market by market will get buried in alert fatigue, increased headcount and a patchwork of compliance tools that don’t talk to each other.
The ones that come out ahead will be building adaptable oversight frameworks that can evolve alongside whatever comes next.