The prediction market business is having quite a moment. Kalshi, which lets users bet on everything from economic data to election outcomes, just closed a $1 billion funding round that values the startup at $11 billion. That's more than double the $5 billion valuation it commanded just months ago during its $300 million fundraise.
Big Names Keep Writing Bigger Checks
This latest round was led by existing investors Sequoia and CapitalG, with participation from Andreessen Horowitz, Paradigm, Anthos Capital, and Neo, according to TechCrunch. These aren't exactly small-time players, which tells you something about how seriously Silicon Valley is taking prediction markets right now.
The timing is interesting because Kalshi's main competitor, Polymarket, is reportedly in talks for its own funding round that could value it somewhere between $12 billion and $15 billion. Polymarket has had its own wild ride this year, going from a $1.2 billion valuation to $9 billion in October following a $150 million round led by Peter Thiel's Founders Fund back in June.
The Industry Is Evolving Rapidly
The prediction market space has been undergoing some serious changes. In October, Kalshi started making moves into the decentralized finance sector, a departure from its traditional regulatory-approved approach. The goal was to make prediction markets more accessible and easier to scale beyond their current user base.
Then Alphabet Inc. (GOOG) subsidiary Google announced it would integrate prediction market data from both Kalshi and Polymarket into Google Finance. That's a pretty significant endorsement for the industry, bringing these platforms into mainstream financial data feeds.
But Regulation Remains A Wild Card
Not everything is smooth sailing, though. In November, New York State proposed legislation that would ban sports-related prediction markets for residents. The news hit sports-focused companies hard, with shares of DraftKings (DKNG) and Flutter Entertainment (FLUT) taking a hit as investors worried about broader regulatory crackdowns.
The regulatory environment remains one of the biggest question marks for these platforms. While Kalshi operates with CFTC approval in the U.S., the rules around what can and can't be traded on prediction markets are still being written in real time. That makes these multi-billion dollar valuations either prescient or incredibly optimistic, depending on how the regulatory landscape shakes out.