Prediction Markets
Prediction markets are exchanges where participants trade contracts based on the probability of future events — elections, economic data, weather, sports performance. They produce some of the most accurate probability forecasts available, often outperforming expert panels.
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What Prediction Markets Are
Prediction markets are financial exchanges where the traded asset is a binary outcome contract. You buy a position on whether something will happen — and your return depends entirely on whether it does.
Unlike opinion polls, prediction markets require participants to put real money behind their beliefs. This creates a strong incentive for accurate forecasting, which is why market prices often converge on accurate probabilities faster than other methods.
The concept has existed in various forms since the 1990s (Iowa Electronic Markets) but has exploded in mainstream use with crypto-native platforms and CFTC-regulated US exchanges.
How They Work
Each contract represents a yes/no question about a future event. If the event resolves 'Yes,' the contract pays $1 per share. If 'No,' it pays $0.
You can buy contracts (betting on Yes) or sell them short (betting on No). Market prices fluctuate based on supply and demand — which is a proxy for collective probability estimates.
Settlement happens automatically when the event resolves, based on an authoritative source (official election results, government data releases, sports box scores, etc.).
- Contract price $0.60 → market implies 60% probability
- Buy at $0.60, event happens → profit $0.40 per share
- Buy at $0.60, event doesn't happen → lose $0.60 per share
- Liquidity varies widely: major political markets are deep; niche markets can be thin
Major Platforms
The landscape has consolidated around a few major platforms, each with different regulatory status and audience:
- Kalshi — CFTC-regulated, US-based, focus on economic and political events
- Polymarket — Crypto-native (Polygon), global, very high liquidity on major events
- Metaculus — Forecasting platform (play money + reputation, no real-money trading)
- PredictIt — Legacy political markets platform, regulatory uncertainty
- Manifold Markets — Play-money platform popular in tech/forecasting communities
Use Cases
Beyond speculation, prediction markets are increasingly used as information tools:
- Business planning — reading market-implied probability of regulatory changes, rate decisions, or economic events
- Sports and DFS — comparing prediction market implied probabilities against sportsbook lines to find pricing discrepancies
- Election analysis — real-time aggregation of information faster than polling
- Risk management — hedging business exposure to specific external outcomes
- Research — academic study of collective intelligence and information aggregation
Risks and Limitations
Prediction markets are not perfect. Key limitations include:
- Thin markets — Low liquidity in niche markets means prices are easily manipulated or simply wrong
- Regulatory risk — US regulatory status for many platforms remains uncertain; rules can change
- Resolution disputes — How a contract resolves can be ambiguous; platform decisions can be surprising
- Overconfidence — Markets can be confidently wrong, especially on novel or unprecedented events
- Tax complexity — Trading gains are taxable; record-keeping required
Frequently Asked Questions
Kalshi is CFTC-regulated and legal for US residents. Polymarket is a crypto-native platform that has faced US regulatory scrutiny — US residents faced access restrictions after a 2022 CFTC settlement. Status continues to evolve. Consult a financial advisor for your specific situation.
They can be a useful signal in a broader research process. They aggregate information quickly. But they're not a substitute for fundamental analysis, especially for long-horizon decisions where market liquidity is low.
Structurally similar — both involve staking money on outcome probabilities. Key differences: prediction markets often cover a much wider range of events (economic data, science milestones, regulatory decisions), and regulated platforms like Kalshi operate under CFTC oversight, not gambling regulators.
Philip Tetlock's Superforecasting research is the foundational work. More recent studies comparing Kalshi/Metaculus forecasts against expert panels are published regularly. The core finding: markets outperform most other methods on well-defined, short-horizon questions.
Still have questions? Text PJ.
Real human, San Diego. No pitch — just a straight answer on what makes sense for your situation.