Key Points

Probo, India's largest opinion trading platform, has responded to the new Online Gaming Bill. The company urges regulators to explicitly recognize opinion trading as a permissible skill-based activity rather than imposing blanket bans. They argue that prediction markets serve as valuable economic forecasting tools that go beyond entertainment. Probo emphasizes that differentiated regulation would better protect users while unlocking the sector's socio-economic potential.

Key Points: Probo Urges Differentiated Regulation for Opinion Trading Not RMG Ban

  • Probo highlights opinion trading as economic forecasting tool beyond gaming
  • Platform emphasizes need for differentiated regulatory approach
  • Blanket RMG ban could stifle innovation and limit sector potential
  • Prediction markets contribute to digital inclusion and combat misinformation
3 min read

Opinion Trading platform Probo urges for explicit regulatory approach instead of blanket ban on RMG sector

India's leading opinion trading platform Probo with 50M users calls for explicit recognition of prediction markets as skill-based activity instead of blanket RMG prohibition.

"We urge the government to explicitly recognize opinion trading as a permissible skill-based activity - Anurag Dhandhi, Business Head at Probo"

New Delhi, August 21

Probo, India's leading opinion trading platform, reviewed the newly introduced Online Gaming Bill and acknowledged the government's objective to build a safer and more transparent digital ecosystem.

The company also urged the government to explicitly recognise Opinion Trading as a permissible skill-based activity and adopting a differentiated regulatory approach instead of a blanket prohibition. Further, the company highlighted that opinion trading, globally known as information or prediction markets, is a reliable economic, information and forecasting tool, and goes beyond gaming.

Probo, the country's largest opinion trading platform with over 50 million registered users, enables trading across a wide range of event contracts.

Anurag Dhandhi, Business Head at Probo stated, "In India, opinion trading has been characterised as a game. However, in the United States of America, it has been regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission as a Designated Contract Market - or in layman's terms - a financial market for information exchange and trading. At its very core, opinion trading (prediction markets) is a tool for economic insight, information aggregation, and forecasting that enables users to apply judgment, knowledge and analysis to real-world developments. By fostering informed and responsible participation, it goes beyond entertainment. It is a nascent-yet-thriving sector globally that contributes to improving financial literacy, data-driven decision-making and strengthening the larger digital economy. While we applaud the government's intent to introduce a progressive framework, we urge the government to build on this vision by explicitly recognizing opinion trading as a permissible skill-based activity and by adopting a differentiated regulatory approach instead of a blanket prohibition. This will strengthen user protection while ensuring that India fully captures the socio-economic benefits of this sunrise sector."

The company further underlined the socio-economic value of prediction markets, noting its role in digital inclusion, employment, combating misinformation, democratisation of trading and innovation. It said that by formally recognizing this innovative format as a permissible business, India can unlock new opportunities in the digital economy while ensuring strong consumer safeguards.

"As India shapes the future of its online gaming industry, we are committed to collaborating with regulators to establish opinion trading as a recognized, skill-based format. This clarity is paramount to safeguarding users, fostering responsible innovation, and unlocking substantial economic value--ultimately positioning India as a pioneer of a transformative, regulated technology sector on the global stage," added Dhandhi.

The company stated that while the intent to protect consumers and create regulatory clarity is a step in the right direction, a blanket ban on all real-money games (RMGs) could unintentionally limit the sector's potential and stifle innovation.

The company said that the tabling of the Bill marks a major step towards safeguarding the interests of all stakeholders, including consumers, employees, vendors, investors, and promoters. It paves the way for faster adoption of e-sports and online social games, facilitates the creation of a central regulatory authority, and ensures a level playing field while accelerating the segment's contributions to India's fast-growing digital economy.

At the same time, Probo emphasized that a more balanced regulatory approach would better safeguard consumers, generate sustainable tax revenues, create jobs, and prevent the migration of users to unregulated platforms.

According to company information Probo is India's leading opinion trading platform that empowers individuals to express their data-backed insights on real-world events and earn rewards. Probo is backed by prominent investors - Peak XV Partners (formerly Sequoia Capital), Elevation Capital and Fundamentum Partnership.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
I've been using Probo for 6 months and it's actually educational. You learn about markets, economics, and current affairs while testing your predictions. Much better than mindless gaming apps!
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Rohit P
Government should definitely consider this. We can't treat all online platforms the same. Prediction markets have genuine economic value and can improve financial literacy among youth.
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Sarah B
While I appreciate the need for regulation, we must be cautious. Even "skill-based" platforms can become addictive. Strong consumer protections and spending limits should be mandatory.
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Vikram M
👍 Good move by Probo. India should lead in emerging technologies instead of banning them. With proper KYC and regulations, opinion trading can be a positive force for financial education.
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Michael C
The comparison to US regulation is interesting. If major economies are treating this as financial markets rather than gaming, India should consider the same approach. Differentiated regulation makes sense.

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