Donald Trump made his first public comments on the prediction markets insider trading controversy, and his framing was instructive — though probably not in the way the industry would have hoped.A Framing the Industry Has Been Trying to AvoidAsked at the press conference about the arrest of a U.S. soldier who allegedly used classified information to profit from bets on the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, Trump's first instinct was curiosity."Well, I don't know about it. Was he betting that they would get him or wouldn't?" he asked. When told the soldier had bet on the mission's success, Trump reached for a sports analogy: "That's like Pete Rose betting on his own team. If he bet against his team, that would be no good."JD Vance makes bizarre comment to journalist following speculation of insider trading at the White House:"Let Marco make his Polymarket bet on that first" pic.twitter.com/IbTt7wzm0r— Headquarters (@HQNewsNow) April 23, 2026It looks like a throwaway remark, but it landed in a place the industry has been carefully trying to avoid. Platforms like Kalshi have put significant effort into positioning their products as financial derivatives under CFTC jurisdiction, to distinguish prediction markets from gambling.Trump just collapsed that distance in a single sentence, comparing the central regulatory concern not to insider trading on Wall Street, but to a baseball betting scandal from the 1980s.Political Language, Regulatory ConsequencesHe wasn't done. Asked about the broader pattern of suspiciously timed trades — including those tied to the recent conflict in Iran — Trump offered a more general verdict."Unfortunately, the whole world has become somewhat of a casino," he said. "I don't like it conceptually. It is what it is."That framing is about as unhelpful as it gets for an industry whose entire regulatory pitch rests on not being a casino.REPORTER: “Are you concerned about insider trading on these prediction markets for the Iran war?”TRUMP: “The world is a casino. It is what it is.”Trump isn’t concerned with insider trading bc his entire family is fleecing the American people. pic.twitter.com/fRfKTBAPja— Stew Peters (@realstewpeters) April 24, 2026The “casino” label is one that critics such as Senator Elizabeth Warren have been advancing, and the President’s comments reinforce that framing.None of this translates into a specific policy signal. Trump made no mention of regulatory action, and his comments read more like unfiltered reaction than a considered position. But words from the press conference carry weight regardless of intent. Combined with his family's known financial interests in the sector, the remarks add a layer of political unpredictability to an industry that is already navigating a difficult regulatory moment. The language the President chose — sports bets, casinos, Pete Rose — shapes how lawmakers and regulators think about what they're being asked to approve. This article was written by Tanya Chepkova at www.financemagnates.com.