Forecasting the future has always been noisy. Opinion polls lag reality, analyst forecasts are often biased, and narratives move faster than data. Prediction markets offer a fundamentally different approach by aggregating capital-weighted beliefs into real-time probabilities, a shift that has increasingly positioned them as part of modern financial data infrastructureIn recent years, prediction markets have moved beyond niche experimentation. They are now actively used to forecast elections, macroeconomic indicators, crypto events, and policy outcomes, often outperforming traditional forecasting methods. Two platforms in particular have come to define this space today: Polymarket and Kalshi.
Prediction markets are marketplaces where participants trade contracts based on the outcome of a future event. These markets convert dispersed information into prices that reflect collective expectations. Each market is framed as a clearly defined question, such as:
The price of a contract reflects the collective probability assigned by the market. For example, a contract trading at 0.65 implies a 65 percent perceived likelihood of that outcome.
Unlike surveys or expert panels, prediction markets reward accuracy with financial incentives. Participants who correctly anticipate outcomes profit, while incorrect forecasts lose capital.However, research has also warned that prediction markets are not always accurate, particularly in politically sensitive contexts. This incentive structure encourages traders to act on information rather than opinion.
Most prediction markets operate using simple and transparent structures:
Participants buy and sell shares based on their belief in an outcome. As new information enters the system, prices update in real time. Once the event resolves, markets settle based on a predefined data source, often referred to as an oracle or an official authority.
Prediction markets are gaining renewed relevance as uncertainty increases across global politics, macroeconomics, and technology. Traditional forecasting models struggle to adapt quickly, while prediction markets continuously incorporate new information.
Several trends are driving adoption:
While many platforms experiment with event-based trading, Polymarket and Kalshi have emerged as the two most significant prediction markets globally. Both aim to surface real-world probabilities, but they differ sharply in architecture, regulation, and target users.
Polymarket is a blockchain-based prediction market that allows users to trade on real-world events using crypto-native rails. Built on decentralized infrastructure, it enables global participation without traditional financial intermediaries.
Key characteristics of Polymarket include:
Polymarket has gained significant attention for markets around elections, geopolitical events, and crypto ecosystem milestones. Because prices update continuously based on user trades, the platform often reflects shifts in sentiment faster than polls or media narratives.
However, Polymarket operates in a regulatory gray area. Access is restricted in certain jurisdictions, and its permissionless nature raises ongoing compliance questions as prediction markets intersect with financial regulation.
Kalshi takes a fundamentally different approach. It is a CFTC-regulated exchange in the United States, making it the first fully compliant prediction market platform of its kind.
Kalshi focuses on event-based contracts tied to economic indicators, public policy, and institutional risk factors. Examples include inflation rates, interest rate decisions, and regulatory outcomes.
Key attributes of Kalshi include:
According to the official CFTC approval announcement, regulated event contracts like those offered by Kalshi are treated as legitimate financial instruments, positioning prediction markets as tools for hedging and risk management rather than speculation.
Although Polymarket and Kalshi are often compared, they solve the same forecasting problem from different layers of the financial stack.
Polymarket prioritizes speed, openness, and global accessibility. Kalshi prioritizes regulatory clarity, institutional trust, and jurisdictional compliance. One is crypto-native and permissionless, the other is regulated and region-specific.
Together, they demonstrate how prediction markets can evolve across both decentralized and traditional financial systems.
Prediction markets are increasingly valuable not because of trading volume, but because of the signals they generate. These markets produce real-time probabilities that inform decision-making across industries.
Common use cases include:
Despite their promise, prediction markets face meaningful challenges:
Addressing these issues will be critical for prediction markets to scale sustainably.
Looking ahead, prediction markets are likely to evolve from standalone platforms into integrated components of broader financial and data infrastructure. Early experimentation already includes AI agents, automated market-making, and cross-protocol integrations.
As blockchain infrastructure matures and reliable data access improves, prediction markets may become a foundational layer for probabilistic finance, powering everything from governance decisions to automated risk management systems.
Much like high-performance RPCs and indexing layers enable scalable decentralized applications, prediction markets are shaping up to be the information layer that turns uncertainty into actionable signals.
The legality of prediction markets depends on jurisdiction.
No. Prediction markets are designed to aggregate information rather than provide entertainment.
Prediction markets outperform traditional forecasting tools because they:
Prediction markets are used by a wide range of participants, including:
Prediction markets are evolving into a critical layer of modern information infrastructure. By converting uncertainty into market-driven probabilities, platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi demonstrate how incentives, liquidity, and infrastructure can surface collective intelligence at scale.
As forecasting becomes increasingly data-driven and automated, prediction markets are likely to play a growing role in how financial systems, institutions, and protocols reason about the future.
To explore more about the infrastructure powering real-time, data-intensive Web3 applications, you can read related insights on the OnFinality blog.
OnFinality is a blockchain infrastructure platform that serves hundreds of billions of API requests monthly across more than 130 networks, including Avalanche, BNB Chain, Cosmos, Polkadot, Ethereum, and Polygon. It provides scalable APIs, RPC endpoints, node hosting, and indexing tools to help developers launch and grow blockchain networks efficiently. OnFinality’s mission is to make Web3 infrastructure effortless so developers can focus on building the future of decentralised applications.
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