Google bans prediction market extensions from Chrome Web Store starting August 1
Polymarket and Kalshi lose their most frictionless on-ramp for retail traders. Browser extensions let users trade without downloading standalone apps or bookmarking sites; stripping them from Chrome forces platforms toward less discoverable channels.
Judge Torres rules New York can block Kalshi's sports gambling contracts
Kalshi seeks regulatory nod to expand perpetual futures beyond crypto
Kalshi blocks campaign-insider trades as experts warn of loopholes
Kalshi traders price Sinner at 80% to beat Djokovic in Wimbledon semifinal
Latest News
Kalshi and Polymarket list NYC mayor contracts side by side
Michael Burry buys Flutter, DraftKings shares, warns prediction markets face regulation
Former Nevada Sen. Dean Heller makes case for prediction markets on CNBC
Polymarket VAR drama shows narratives don't really move markets
Failed CFTC chair nominee Quintenz joins prediction market advocacy group CPM
World.xyz migrates prediction market from Solana to Robinhood Chain after one week
Prediction News Daily BriefThe Resolution
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What moved markets overnight, why it matters, who's affected. Read by operators, traders, and regulators before the open.
Top Stories
Judge Torres denies Kalshi New York injunction, company appeals to Second Circuit
Torres's ruling strips Kalshi of its central federal preemption defense in the most closely watched state case to date. New York can now enforce gaming statutes against Kalshi's sports contracts while litigation proceeds, and other state attorneys general will cite this opinion to seek parallel bans. Connecticut Attorney General William Tong has already signaled he will use Torres's decision to guide similar cases in his state. The Second Circuit appeal faces long odds on preliminary relief, so Kalshi must prepare for market-by-market enforcement rather than one clean federal win. Every state victory emboldens copycat statutes and stretches Kalshi's legal budget. Polymarket faces identical exposure as the preemption shield cracks across multiple jurisdictions.
Polymarket launches trust campaign to re-enter US after four-year absence
Polymarket's return campaign lands in a hostile regulatory moment. Congress is considering a bipartisan Senate bill that would ban sports event contracts outright, stripping a key revenue category just as the platform courts American users again. The platforms must now fight on three fronts simultaneously — federal legislation, CFTC rulemaking, and state enforcement — each demanding separate legal resources and political coalitions. The influencer-driven outreach suggests Polymarket is betting on retail enthusiasm to buffer regulatory headwinds, but any CFTC finding of misconduct from its ongoing creator-payment probe could collapse its exchange designation before the campaign gains traction. Competitors and lawmakers alike will treat Polymarket's marketing claims as evidence of either rehabilitation or continued overreach.
ESMA says EU retail binary options ban already covers prediction market event contracts
For Kalshi and Polymarket, ESMA's clarification kills the hope that event contracts evade EU retail restrictions through branding alone. The EU was the most plausible near-term expansion market beyond their U.S. base; operators now face a blanket retail prohibition absent a wholesale or professional trader pivot. The timing is sharp: Kalshi's $22 billion valuation assumes geographic growth, and Polymarket's tokenized architecture sits in MiCA's pending zone, leaving its regulatory path unresolved. Both platforms must restructure EU access around accredited or institutional users, a much smaller pool. Meanwhile, U.S. competitors watching from state-licensed sportsbook positions gain breathing room without Kalshi or Polymarket distorting European retail pricing. The platforms' legal firepower, already stretched across Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota, and New York federal appeals, must now stretch across Atlantic compliance builds too.
Kalshi loses New York injunction bid, appeals to Second Circuit while Washington fight opens
Torres's ruling strips Kalshi of its central preemption defense across every active state case. New York can now enforce gaming statutes while litigation proceeds, and other attorneys general will cite this opinion to seek parallel bans. The Washington hearing opens a second front on the same theory. Kalshi's Second Circuit appeal faces long odds on preliminary relief, so the platform must prepare for market-by-market enforcement. Connecticut Attorney General William Tong has already signaled he will use Torres's decision to guide similar cases. Every state victory emboldens copycat statutes, stretching Kalshi's legal budget and forcing potential geofencing rather than one clean federal win. Polymarket faces identical exposure.
Prediction markets face tax warnings and purist backlash as volumes surge
The Tobin tax warning from Reuters Breakingviews puts a concrete policy threat on the table for Kalshi and Polymarket. Transaction taxes would hit the high-frequency retail flow that currently drives their $240 billion annual volume estimate, compressing margins just as both platforms court institutional traders. ARK's $5 trillion forecast assumes continued retail growth and regulatory tolerance; a tax regime breaks that model. Meta's entry adds a zero-cost competitor with distribution to billions of users. The platforms are squeezed between policy risk above, Big Tech competition below, and purist criticism that undermines their event-contract framing with regulators. Kalshi and Polymarket must now defend their regulatory status on three fronts simultaneously.
North Carolina becomes third state to tax prediction markets under signed budget
The 6% levy gives Kalshi and Polymarket a concrete cost to price into North Carolina operations, even as the state leaves them federally regulated but untethered by state licensing. That combination — taxation without concurrent regulation — is the emerging template: Kentucky and Illinois already impose similar taxes, and each new state that copies the mix erodes the margin advantage CFTC registration once promised. For operators, the math flips fast. A platform paying 6% in three states faces a compound drag that untaxed offshore venues escape entirely. The North Carolina signing also signals that governors, not just legislatures, are willing to green-light these taxes as budget balancers. That political cover matters: it means the Kentucky-Illinois pattern is replicable in any state with a revenue gap and a friendly governor. For Kalshi and Polymarket, the fight is now less about any single tax rate and more about whether the preemption argument they are testing in Illinois and Kentucky can cap the stack of conflicting state claims before it reaches a dozen.
NACA sues Polymarket over alleged fake trades and sockpuppet campaign
Polymarket now defends its marketing on three simultaneous tracks: this consumer lawsuit, a CFTC probe, and bipartisan Senate scrutiny. NACA's organized-plaintiff structure gives the case staying power that individual consumer suits often lack, and the sockpuppet allegations frame the campaign as deliberate deception rather than mere exaggeration. Any court finding that the tactics were systemic strengthens the CFTC's hand and deepens congressional pressure. The plaque evidence, however quirky, offers a tangible artifact for discovery and potential class-certification storytelling. Competitors gain regulatory breathing room while Polymarket's legal team stretches across three fronts, each with its own timeline and exposure.
Horizon and Elwood add Kalshi connectivity for institutional desks
For Kalshi, the back-to-back infrastructure additions turn the recent market-maker desk builds into executable reality. DRW, Wintermute, and IMC need direct electronic pipes to place and manage quotes at scale; Horizon and Elwood supply those rails. The timing tightens: Kalshi's new professional trading interface and AI stress-testing tools are built for this user class, but the platform must prove it can support institutional-size positions without slippage or operational failure. If the connectivity performs, Kalshi becomes a genuine alternative to traditional futures venues for event-driven macro exposure. If it falters, the desk flow that recently arrived can exit as quickly as it came, leaving Kalshi with sunk infrastructure costs and a credibility gap against Polymarket's parallel push for block-size liquidity. The Bernstein M&A valuation thesis hinges on this execution window.
Landsman pushes ban on Supreme Court prediction market and stock trading
This proposal widens the congressional crackdown from elected lawmakers to appointed justices and career officials, forcing Kalshi and Polymarket to prepare for a second front of account closures well beyond the House panel's existing bill targeting Congress. Supreme Court participation on these platforms is minimal today, but the precedent matters: if justices are deemed too conflicted to trade event contracts, federal judges and senior regulators become the next logical targets. That expands the population of barred users from hundreds of members of Congress to tens of thousands of federal employees, eroding the institutional-trader narrative CFTC-registered platforms have used to court sophisticated capital. The timing compresses their compliance runway, since any of these bills could attach to must-pass legislation before operators can build screening tools broad enough to catch the expanded category.
Texas Medical Association seeks 21-and-over age limit on prediction markets
TMA's stance gives state lawmakers fresh political cover to push age-gating bills that CFTC-registered platforms have never faced at the federal level. Kalshi and Polymarket built their U.S. stacks on identity verification for trading eligibility, not age floors for account access; retrofitting that infrastructure carries real engineering cost. Texas is a large market for both platforms, so a state-level age ban would carve out material volume. The absence of cited research also matters: it signals that medical lobbying can shape prediction-market rules without empirical backing, lowering the bar for similar campaigns elsewhere. Physicians' groups in other states may file parallel requests if TMA's gambit draws headlines rather than scrutiny. Meanwhile, sportsbook-backed competitors gain a talking point to distinguish their own age-verified, state-licensed products from the CFTC-regulated model.
Prediction markets gained World Cup users late as sportsbooks peaked early
The lagged user-growth pattern flips the sportsbook advantage on its head. Kalshi and Polymarket captured bettors who stayed engaged through the knockout stage, while DraftKings, Flutter, Caesars, and MGM saw DAUs fade after group play. For prediction markets, late-tournament liquidity is higher-stakes liquidity — the final rounds draw the biggest unhedged positions and the sharpest price discovery. This usage curve matters to the DRW, Wintermute, and IMC desks already committed to these platforms: they need sustained flow, not a spike-and-drop pattern. The data also arms Kalshi's $40 billion valuation talks with evidence that its user base behaves like a derivatives market, not a gambling impulse. If the pattern holds for NFL and Olympics, sportsbooks face a genuine compositional threat to their core seasonal revenue. A reversion to early-peak behavior in those sports would reverse the narrative.
Chicago weighs insider-trading ban on Kalshi, Polymarket for city staff
For Kalshi and Polymarket, the Chicago proposal adds a new class of restriction they cannot preempt: municipal ethics rules that apply to traders rather than to the platforms themselves. City employees with budget, contract, or personnel insight become forbidden users regardless of federal licensing, carving non-compliance holes into every local market where similar ordinances spread. The platforms gain no legal mechanism to screen for city employment status at signup, so enforcement falls on whistleblower complaints and post-trade audits rather than hard barriers. That uncertainty chills institutional flow from public-sector-adjacent desks already wary of headline risk. Each additional city that copies Chicago deepens the compliance architecture both platforms must maintain, raising the cost of staying in a market where state attorneys general already seek pre-merits bans in Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota, Kentucky, and New Mexico.
DraftKings launches in-house DKeX exchange, ending Crypto.com and CME partnerships
DKeX lets DraftKings keep exchange margin and user data instead of paying fees to Crypto.com and CME. The $3.4 billion annualized volume run-rate puts it in the same tier as established prediction-market venues. DraftKings' 40 million registered users give it a distribution base most CFTC-registered exchanges lack. The move pressures rival sportsbooks to build or buy their own exchange infrastructure rather than white-label through partners. Bernstein analysts flag this as a catalyst for sector M&A as platforms race to verticalize. The first sportsbook to prove it can hold liquidity on sports contracts at volume will set the template for whether prediction markets eat into traditional betting handle or remain a regulated sideline. DraftKings' timeline is now measured against NFL season kickoff.
N.J. committees advance 9% prediction market tax bills for fall return
Polymarket and Kalshi now face a widening tax map that already includes Illinois, Kentucky, and North Carolina. A 9% New Jersey levy would layer onto that stack, compounding state-by-state costs that CFTC registration was meant to prevent. Each new state that taxes without licensing erodes the margin advantage federal registration once promised. The income-based structure taxes profit rather than turnover, sparing money-losing markets but exposing successful verticals to a persistent haircut. For operators, the preemption argument they are testing in Illinois and Kentucky becomes harder to sustain with every additional state statute on the books. Platforms without government-affairs teams in Trenton will struggle to shape amendments before final passage. A signed New Jersey law would signal that governors are willing to green-light these taxes as budget balancers, inviting more states to copy the mix. The fight is now less about any single rate and more about whether the preemption shield can cap conflicting state claims before the stack reaches a half-dozen jurisdictions.
Polymarket adds Spark-powered Bitcoin Lightning deposits
For Polymarket, Bitcoin Lightning integration removes a core friction point that pushed crypto-native users toward on-chain or offshore alternatives. Deposit times fell from roughly an hour to under a second. That speed matters most for traders who spot mispriced markets and need capital deployed before the edge vanishes. The self-custodial design also answers a recurring complaint about centralized prediction markets: users fund accounts directly without handing bitcoin to an intermediary. Kalshi lacks comparable crypto-native rails, so Polymarket now has a funding-speed advantage with the bitcoin-holding trader segment. The question is whether this converts to sustained volume, or merely adds another option most users ignore. Polymarket volume still settles in stablecoins; Lightning uptake in the next 60 days will show whether bitcoin deposits were a missing piece or a niche convenience.
Kalshi traders push Hormuz normalization odds to 2027 after Trump ends Iran ceasefire
The Hormuz repricing shows Kalshi's geopolitical markets functioning as real-time risk gauges, but the lack of disclosed volume, open interest, or spread data leaves traders guessing whether the price move reflects deep conviction or thin-book noise. Kalshi, this opacity is becoming a structural liability. Polymarket's comparable macro contracts now carrybenchmark liquidity that institutional market makers use to allocate participation, and Kalshi cannot demonstrate comparable two-sided depth. Without that transparency, its CFTC registration stays a compliance label rather than a competitive edge that pulls size from traditional commodities desks. The contract also tests whether prediction markets can sustain non-election verticals when headlines rotate fast.
Kalshi traders split on Nasdaq-100 ending 2026 above 30,000
The even-odds pricing on a narrow 1% gap tests whether Kalshi's macro contracts can generate conviction when the underlying index sits almost exactly at the strike. For traders, 50-50 implies no clear informational edge from the crowd, which raises execution questions: without directional skew, market makers have less incentive to tighten spreads, and takers face wider costs to enter. Kalshi needs these index contracts to show tighter pricing than implied volatility on comparable options, or institutional desks will keep routing hedges through CME futures and ETF options instead. The late-May crossing date matters because it gives traders seven months of possible reversal to price in, yet the market lands dead center. If post-earnings volatility or Fed shifts fail to move the contract off 50-50, Kalshi's macro markets risk looking like noise collectors rather than information aggregators.
Prospect Markets to present at Emerging Growth Conference on July 15
The July 15 session gives Prospect Markets a timed platform to promote its Crypto.com-backed OG Broker partnership to investors weighing crowded U.S. prediction-market entries. That LOI offers a shortcut past CFTC registration queues by white-labeling through OG Broker's existing license. But the sources do not establish who actually provides the liquidity. If OG Broker resells another firm's market-making, Prospect Markets may face thin spreads like the problem that reportedly pushed FanDuel Predicts to add a second exchange partner. The 10-minute slot is short, so the pitch must land the partnership narrative without room for detail. A weak investor reception would strand the LOI as a non-binding press release rather than a funded launch. The competition from Crypto.com itself adds pressure: the backer is also a rival.
Kalshi in talks to raise at $40 billion valuation, nearly double May mark
Kalshi's $40 billion valuation target pressures Polymarket to match its fundraising pace or surrender the institutional capital that feeds platform liquidity. A widening valuation gap would let Kalshi outspend rivals on product and market-maker incentives just as both venues court the same DRW, Wintermute, and IMC desks.
CME plans to sue CFTC to block Kalshi's bitcoin perpetual futures
Kalshi to defend its perpetual-futures structure in court just as it races to convert $5.5 billion in two-week volume into sticky flow. An adverse ruling would compel Kalshi to restructure the product or exit the perps market entirely.
Meta weighed Kalshi buyout before building play-money Arena
The revealed talks expose the strategic value Kalshi held in Zuckerberg's eyes at the moment of peak prediction-market hype, and what Meta chose to walk away from. Kalshi, the disclosure is a double-edged signal: it validates the platform as acquisition-worthy at a time when it is pitching a $40 billion valuation, yet it confirms that the largest distribution gatekeeper in social media opted to compete rather than pay. Arena now enters market with full knowledge of Kalshi's product mechanics, user flow, and revenue model from those same discussions. Kalshi must prove its real-money regulatory edge can outpace a free rival with zero user acquisition cost across 3 billion daily users.
Bernstein predicts prediction-market M&A wave as platforms consolidate infrastructure
Vertical integration is becoming the price of admission, not a competitive edge. DraftKings and Coinbase have already bought their infrastructure; Robinhood has routed 16 billion event contracts through Rothera. Platforms still renting technology stack face margin compression or acquisition. Kalshi and Polymarket, Bernstein's target label means every funding conversation now includes a takeover premium. The next 12 months will separate owners from renters: operators that do not control their clearing and custody will either sell at a discount or watch liquidity migrate to vertically integrated venues that keep the full fee.
Trump Jr. received $300,000 equity stake in Kalshi
Kalshi's recruitment of a politically connected figure now produces direct financial exposure to the Trump family's regulatory leverage. The equity grant gives Donald Trump Jr. a personal stake in Kalshi's success just as the platform defends its CFTC registration against state attorneys general in Kentucky and Minnesota, and rolls out bitcoin perpetual futures amid CME litigation. Any CFTC or congressional action affecting Kalshi's sports-event contracts, altcoin expansion, or state preemption cases now lands on a regulator with potential political ties to a major shareholder. Competitors cannot match this access, but the optics risk inviting extra scrutiny from lawmakers already pressing prediction markets on marketing practices and consumer protection.
Kalshi CEO confirms IPO consideration but rules out 2026 listing
Kalshi must now deliver on its $40 billion valuation talks or see its funding window narrow as Robinhood and DraftKings build self-contained competing platforms that need no third-party exchange.
Wealthsimple partners with Kalshi to bring 4,000 event contracts to Canadian investors
Kalshi gains a retail distribution channel in Canada just as Robinhood routes World Cup contracts to Rothera while keeping some markets on Kalshi, threatening Kalshi's US volume. The Wealthsimple pipeline lets Kalshi replace slipping Robinhood flow with new international retail traders instead of fighting Rothera for the same American users.
Novig wins CFTC approval to operate Ludlow Exchange as designated contract market
Novig's federal clearance lets it sell sports contracts in 36 states today while traditional sportsbooks still patch together state licenses. That speed advantage is narrowing fast. DraftKings' DKeX launch and ProphetX's five-day go-live show that competitors can close the gap in under a week. Novig must now lock down liquidity and user acquisition before vertically integrated rivals with larger marketing budgets scale their own CFTC stacks. The first platform to prove it can hold spreads on NFL and college sports at volume will set the template for whether prediction markets eat sportsbook share or remain a regulated sideline. Novig's sweepstakes heritage gives it a user base, but not the institutional desks that DRW, Wintermute, and IMC are building for Kalshi and Polymarket. Without that flow, Novig risks being a retail-only venue in a market moving toward block-size trading.
Kalshi, Crypto.com and Polymarket sue to block Kentucky's 14.25% prediction markets tax
Kalshi and Polymarket must now defend Kentucky accounts from both Attorney General Coleman's state gambling suit and this tax challenge they filed against the same state. Any adverse ruling on either front risks forcing both platforms to geofence Kentucky while their federal CFTC registration is tested in preemption litigation.
Traders sue Polymarket in New York over disputed Strategy bitcoin market resolution
Polymarket now faces a private lawsuit alongside its active CFTC investigation, stretching legal resources across multiple fronts simultaneously. The state-court venue matters: plaintiffs chose New York rather than arbitration, exposing market-resolution decisions to judicial review and potential discovery. If courts second-guess how Polymarket interprets its own rules, every future settlement carries litigation risk and traders may demand clearer terms upfront. The personal naming of CEO Shayne Coplan signals plaintiffs aim to pierce corporate shields and hold leadership directly accountable. For competitors like Kalshi, the case offers a cautionary template: imprecise rule language invites trader lawsuits that erode trust and inflate legal costs regardless of the outcome.
Massachusetts judge lets attorney general expand gaming suit against Kalshi
Kalshi must now fight expanded claims in Massachusetts on top of active injunctions or suits in Michigan, Kentucky, New Mexico, and Illinois. The under-21 targeting allegation is a new tack: if it survives dismissal, other state attorneys general can copy the theory without waiting for federal preemption rulings. Each state court that accepts a gambling-law framing emboldens the next to sidestep CFTC registration entirely. Kalshi's legal budget and product roadmap must now account for parallel state fights that move faster than federal appeals. The platform's survival depends on affording every front simultaneously, not winning one clean federal ruling.
Michigan judge blocks Kalshi sports contracts for 14 days with $120K daily fine threat
The $120,000 daily fine threat turns a temporary pause into a hard financial ultimatum: Kalshi must either geofence Michigan entirely or risk burning cash while it fights. This is the second state to successfully ban Kalshi's sports products after Illinois's tax-and-license push, and Judge Aquilina's willingness to enjoin before any merits ruling gives other state attorneys general a faster playbook than federal preemption appeals. Kalshi is already defending parallel actions in Illinois, Minnesota, Kentucky, New Mexico, and Massachusetts; each new front demands separate legal budgets and product restrictions. The 14-day window is short, but a second state copying Michigan's pre-merits injunction would confirm that state courts can move faster than the Sixth Circuit. Platforms now face a patchwork survival test: afford every fight simultaneously or retreat market by market.
Senators demand CFTC investigate Polymarket over fake bets report
Polymarket must now answer to the CFTC on two tracks — an agency probe and a congressionally demanded investigation — while the staged-bet finding is fresh. Any determination that the tactic was systemic rather than isolated puts its CFTC exchange designation at direct risk.
Michigan judge blocks Kalshi sports bets while Illinois tax fight heads to court
The Michigan injunction gives other state attorneys general a proven playbook: seek a pre-merits ban before Kalshi can reach federal appellate preemption rulings. Kalshi is now fighting state-level restrictions in Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota, Kentucky, and New Mexico simultaneously, each demanding separate legal budgets and potential geofencing. The Illinois 15% tax would erode margins against untaxed competitors if replicated elsewhere. Every state victory emboldens copycat statutes, stretching Kalshi's legal team thin and forcing the platform toward market-by-market retreat rather than one clean federal victory. Polymarket faces identical exposure, making the preemption outcome in any single federal court a survival event for both platforms.
Cboe launches Cboe Predicts with S&P 500 binary option contracts
Cboe's existing options exchange status lets it bypass the CFTC registration delays that slowed Kalshi and Polymarket, giving the world's second-largest stock exchange a structural speed advantage in capturing retail prediction-market flow.
CFTC sues Kentucky to block state crackdown on prediction markets
Kalshi and Polymarket must now defend Kentucky accounts from both state gambling suits and federal preemption litigation. Any adverse ruling on either front risks forcing both platforms to geofence Kentucky while their CFTC registration is tested in court.
Polymarket paid creators $1.9 million in fake bets on dummy sites
Polymarket now faces scrutiny from both the CFTC and Congress over whether the staged videos constitute isolated marketing overreach or systemic conduct that threatens its exchange designation. Any finding of a pattern puts its CFTC order at direct risk and would force immediate operational restructuring. The three-front pressure — agency probe, congressional demands, and consumer litigation — stretches legal resources and complicates any growth timeline before a likely enforcement determination. Competitors gain regulatory breathing room while Polymarket defends its status.
Charles Schwab and Cboe to launch S&P 500 binary options contracts
Schwab's 39 million accounts give Kalshi and Polymarket their first rival with existing retail scale and brokerage trust, not a startup fighting for user acquisition. Cboe's regulated options plumbing means Schwab can skip the CFTC registration slog that slowed earlier entrants.
Kalshi in talks to raise at $40bn valuation as IPO discussions progress
Kalshi's $40 billion valuation target and IPO talks underscore its dominance in prediction markets, pressuring rivals like Polymarket as revenue hits $2 billion annualized.
Kentucky AG Coleman sues Kalshi and Polymarket over alleged illegal sports betting
Kalshi and Polymarket must now defend Kentucky accounts from both Coleman's state gambling suit and the separate tax challenge they filed against the same state. Any adverse ruling on either front risks forcing both platforms to geofence Kentucky while their federal CFTC registration is tested in preemption litigation.
Gary Gensler files amicus brief backing Ohio against Kalshi in sports prediction market case
The brief arms Ohio and other states with a former dual-agency chair's authority to challenge CFTC jurisdictional claims, directly undermining Kalshi's federal preemption defense in its fights with Minnesota, Rhode Island, and New Mexico.
Novig and ProphetX win CFTC approvals as sports-native prediction exchanges
Novig must now race to launch and capture liquidity before DraftKings' DKeX clears its self-certified contracts and Robinhood scales its existing brokerage distribution. ProphetX's five-day launch shows that first-mover advantage in this window is measured in days, not months.
Bipartisan Senate bill would ban sports event contracts on CFTC-regulated prediction markets
Kalshi and Polymarket face a pincer movement: the Senate bill would strip their sports revenue outright, while the CFTC's parallel rulemaking could impose reporting burdens that raise compliance costs. The platforms must now fight on three fronts — federal legislation, agency rulemaking, and state enforcement — each with different timelines and political coalitions. Sports contracts drove record World Cup volume for both venues, so losing that category would crater growth narratives just as they court institutional desks. DraftKings and Novig are watching; any federal sports ban would push demand back toward state-licensed sportsbooks or offshore venues. The bill's bipartisan sponsorship signals Congress may override CFTC jurisdiction directly, making the 45-day comment period on agency rules look like a sideshow.
Polymarket becomes exclusive US prediction market partner of Liga MX
Polymarket now holds official league data relationships for both Liga MX and the World Cup broadcast cycle. If rivals like Kalshi and FanDuel Predicts cannot match comparable soccer federation tie-ins before the knockout stage, Polymarket will capture the bulk of tournament-related retail flow on CFTC-regulated venues.
Polymarket traders give SpaceX 61% odds of $2T to $2.5T valuation on debut
Several million dollars in SpaceX contract volume tests whether prediction markets can serve as the primary price-discovery venue for pre-IPO speculation. If Polymarket's closing-odds line converges with SpaceX's actual market cap, institutional desks will treat event contracts as benchmark inputs for illiquid equity bets.
Anonymous Polymarket user bets $400,000 on Putin exit by year-end
This wager tests whether Polymarket's recently built institutional liquidity can absorb concentrated directional risk outside of sports, where DRW, Wintermute, and IMC have already demonstrated capacity during the World Cup. A $400,000 political bet from a new account with no track record forces market makers to price assassination, coup, and succession risk in a thin information environment. If the position clears without widening spreads, it signals that Polymarket's liquidity backbone is venue-agnostic and can support event-contract expansion into geopolitics and other non-sports verticals. For competitors like Kalshi, it raises the bar for matching cross-category depth. Polymarket, repeated whale clearance in unstructured markets converts tournament-proven infrastructure into a permanent liquidity advantage that attracts institutional desks permanently rather than seasonally.
Allium data shows U.S. wallets lead Polymarket political trading despite access restrictions
The $571 million figure gives the CFTC a concrete dollar amount to cite if it treats U.S. access to the main platform as willful non-compliance rather than a leaky geoblock. For Polymarket, that reframes its federal registration of the separate U.S. exchange from a shield into potential evidence of systemic gaps on the primary site. The platform is already defending staged-bet allegations and a Google engineer insider-trading case, and this data adds a third thread to the same question: whether its surveillance and identity controls match the scale of its markets. Any CFTC finding that U.S. volume reflects inadequate compliance would force immediate operational restructuring, likely stricter identity verification or reduced contract availability, just as competitors like Kalshi press their regulatory advantage.
CFTC opens extensive probe into Polymarket over fake bets and staged trades
Polymarket now faces a formal CFTC investigation running parallel to bipartisan Senate demands and a consumer lawsuit, all centered on whether its staged-bet influencer campaign was systemic. The agency must determine if the fabricated wins and paid creator posts represent isolated marketing overreach or a pattern of market manipulation that threatens its exchange designation. Any finding of systemic conduct puts Polymarket's CFTC order at direct risk and would force immediate operational restructuring. Competitors like Kalshi gain regulatory breathing room while Polymarket fights on three fronts simultaneously, stretching legal resources and complicating any growth timeline before a likely enforcement determination.
Kalshi partners with ADI Predictstreet on FIFA World Cup 2026 branding
The deleted FIFA post and corrected ADI Predictstreet attribution reveal how thin the line is between legitimate co-branding and overstated partner claims in prediction markets. For Kalshi, the confusion risks regulatory and reputational scrutiny at the moment it is fighting state-level challenges in Illinois and pursuing a major valuation. The episode tests whether the platform's compliance and communications infrastructure can scale as fast as its sports ambitions. ADI Predictstreet's approval to expand its prediction market range adds regulatory complexity to the tie-up. A second misstep on partnership claims would give state attorneys general already investigating prediction markets a concrete example to cite.
Zuckerberg pushes Meta to partner with Polymarket and Kalshi for Arena
For Polymarket and Kalshi, Meta's partnership overtures carry a dual threat: Meta's experimental prediction markets app could drain their user base if Arena scales across 3 billion daily users, or the deals could cement them as the regulated backend for the largest social platform on Earth. The buy-versus-build decision Zuckerberg already tested with Kalshi shows acquisition remains on the table. Neither platform can afford a partnership that gives Meta the data to replicate their markets while keeping the real-money layer. The negotiation leverage belongs to Zuckerberg, and whatever terms he extracts will set the template for how prediction markets survive or surrender to big-tech distribution.
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Upcoming Events
See allNinth Circuit ruling window opens — Kalshi, Crypto.com, Robinhood v. Nevada. Oral arguments held April 16; panel leaned skeptical of the platforms. A loss for Kalshi creates the circuit split with the Third Circuit that accelerates Supreme Court review.
Interactive Brokers Q2 call (after close). Watch for ForecastEx volume guidance and any commentary on the CFTC's pending event-contract rulemaking.
Fourth Circuit ruling window — Kalshi v. Maryland. Panel questioned whether sports event contracts are "basically gambling" at the May 7 oral arguments. Could deepen the circuit split or align with the Third Circuit.
DraftKings Q2 call. First quarter under the Predictions super-app rollout; analyst questions expected on the Railbird DCM launch and the $200-300M prediction-markets investment commitment.