Marketdash

Polymarket Lands Dow Jones Partnership As Prediction Markets Go Mainstream

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Polymarket is teaming up with Dow Jones to share its prediction market data across The Wall Street Journal, Barron's and other major outlets, marking the platform's first formal media deal since returning to U.S. operations.

What Happened: Prediction platform Polymarket is partnering with Dow Jones to distribute its market-implied data across several flagship media brands, according to Bloomberg. Under the deal, Polymarket's prediction market data will show up in The Wall Street Journal, Barron's and Investor's Business Daily, both online and in print.

The data won't just sit there either. It'll support new editorial features, including earnings calendars that reflect what the market actually expects from publicly traded companies, rather than just analyst estimates.

This is Polymarket's first formal media partnership, and the timing is notable. The platform only recently returned to U.S. operations after settling with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in 2022 over registration issues. The companies plan to formally announce the partnership later Wednesday.

Why It Matters: Polymarket resumed U.S. services late last year following its regulatory timeout tied to the CFTC settlement. The Dow Jones deal suggests prediction markets are moving from internet curiosity to legitimate data source, at least in the eyes of traditional media.

The partnership reflects a broader shift toward incorporating prediction market data as an alternative signal alongside polls, analyst forecasts and traditional market indicators. Real-time sentiment and probabilistic forecasting apparently have their place now, even as regulatory scrutiny around these platforms continues.

Speaking of regulation, Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour has been vocal about drawing distinctions in this space. He's emphasized that insider trading has always been prohibited on Kalshi's platform and stressed the difference between regulated U.S.-based prediction markets and unregulated offshore platforms.

Mansour noted that Kalshi operates as a CFTC-regulated exchange and deliberately delayed its launch until receiving U.S. approval. The company also supports Rep. Ritchie Torres' (D-NY) proposed legislation to reaffirm the ban on insider trading in prediction markets, pointing out that such rules would apply only to regulated U.S. platforms, not offshore markets where many alleged issues have occurred.

Polymarket Lands Dow Jones Partnership As Prediction Markets Go Mainstream

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Polymarket is teaming up with Dow Jones to share its prediction market data across The Wall Street Journal, Barron's and other major outlets, marking the platform's first formal media deal since returning to U.S. operations.

What Happened: Prediction platform Polymarket is partnering with Dow Jones to distribute its market-implied data across several flagship media brands, according to Bloomberg. Under the deal, Polymarket's prediction market data will show up in The Wall Street Journal, Barron's and Investor's Business Daily, both online and in print.

The data won't just sit there either. It'll support new editorial features, including earnings calendars that reflect what the market actually expects from publicly traded companies, rather than just analyst estimates.

This is Polymarket's first formal media partnership, and the timing is notable. The platform only recently returned to U.S. operations after settling with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in 2022 over registration issues. The companies plan to formally announce the partnership later Wednesday.

Why It Matters: Polymarket resumed U.S. services late last year following its regulatory timeout tied to the CFTC settlement. The Dow Jones deal suggests prediction markets are moving from internet curiosity to legitimate data source, at least in the eyes of traditional media.

The partnership reflects a broader shift toward incorporating prediction market data as an alternative signal alongside polls, analyst forecasts and traditional market indicators. Real-time sentiment and probabilistic forecasting apparently have their place now, even as regulatory scrutiny around these platforms continues.

Speaking of regulation, Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour has been vocal about drawing distinctions in this space. He's emphasized that insider trading has always been prohibited on Kalshi's platform and stressed the difference between regulated U.S.-based prediction markets and unregulated offshore platforms.

Mansour noted that Kalshi operates as a CFTC-regulated exchange and deliberately delayed its launch until receiving U.S. approval. The company also supports Rep. Ritchie Torres' (D-NY) proposed legislation to reaffirm the ban on insider trading in prediction markets, pointing out that such rules would apply only to regulated U.S. platforms, not offshore markets where many alleged issues have occurred.