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Putting Money on Prediction Markets

4/1/2026

16 Comments

 
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by David Hagenbuch - professor of marketing at Messiah University -
​author of 
Honorable Influence - founder of Mindful Marketing -
author of Mindful Marketing: Business Ethics that Stick 

Q: Who will be the next head coach of the North Carolina Tar Heels men’s basketball team?
Q: When will the Department of Homeland Security be funded again?
Q: Where will Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's wedding occur?
 
You might know the answers to these questions now, but at the time of writing this article, most people did not, which is why they were among the top trending questions on Kalshi, a key player in one of the fastest-growing consumer trends: prediction markets.
 
It’s human nature to speculate, and in many ways the habit is helpful – we need to anticipate future events and outcomes so we can prepare for them, e.g., natural disasters, economic cycles. But will betting on the outcomes of all manner of life events pay out as simple diversion or social/economic disaster? Now that’s a great question for Kalshi!
 
What are prediction markets and how does betting in them differ from other common kinds of gambling, e.g., casinos, lotteries, sports?
 
At the most basic level, prediction market betting is the same as other gambling in that the bettor places a wager on the outcome of an event, e.g., at a casino, where the ‘pill’ will land on a roulette wheel; for a Powerball drawing, what the winning numbers will be; in the NCAA Division I basketball tournament, which men’s/women’s teams will win.
 
However, a key difference is that betting in prediction markets is not limited to one or a few specific types of  bets; rather, people can wager on the outcomes of virtually any activity, which players seem to be doing with increasing enthusiasm.
 
For instance, for the 2026 Super Bowl, Kalshi alone handled over $1 billion worth of bets – an increase of 2,700% from 2025. One of the most popular wagers was, ‘What will be the first song that halftime performer Bad Bunny will sing?’ Bets on that ‘event’ alone surpassed $100 million. People wagered on many other incidental Super Bowl outcomes such as ‘Will Elon Musk or Lionel Messi attend the game?’
 
Thanks to companies like Kalshi and Polymarket, the other main purveyor of prediction bets, this kind of gambling doesn’t need to wait for a once-a-year sports spectacle. People can wager on virtually anything that gains the interest of enough people to create a betting market. For example, while writing this paragraph, some of the trending bets only Polymarket are:
  • Who will be the winner of Eurovision 2026?
  • When will the U.S. and Iran reach a ceasefire?
  • What will SpaceX’s IPO closing market cap be?
  • What will be the price of crude oil by the end of March?
  • Who will be the Republican presidential nominee in 2028?
  • How many Elon Musk # tweets will there be March 31 - April 7?
 
The great variety of bets and ease of placing them from almost anywhere have spurred a prediction market boom. In December of 2026 alone, Kalshi and Polymarket collectively saw almost $12 billion in wagers, an increase of more than 400% from the previous year.
 
Another important difference: prediction markets don’t serve as the ‘house’ like sports books do; rather, markets like Kalshi and Polymarket earn money by charging trading fees for bringing together opposite sides of a bet. The price of a bet on their sites indicates the likelihood that a given outcome will occur, e.g., a $0.20 bet = 20% probability of ‘yes, it will happen.’
 
The screenshots below from Kalshi show a bet on whether the government shutdown will last for at least 70 days. Given the market-calculated 62% probability of ‘yes,’ $1.00 bet on the affirmative earns $2.00, if the shutdown reaches 70 days, while $1.00 wagered on ‘no’ earns $3.00, apparently because of its lower, 41% chance, of occurring.

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So, if someone bets $100K on ‘no,’ and the shutdown ends in fewer than 70 days, they earn $300K. They also would apparently earn 3.25% interest on the $100K wagered from the time they place the bet and put the money in their Kalshi account until the bet is paid.

That’s a quick primer on why prediction markets have grown so rapidly, what they are, and how they work. However, the most important question, which more individuals and organizations have begun to ask, is, Should they exist? Just because they’re popular and profitable doesn’t mean they’re desirable, or right. So, what are the pros and cons of prediction markets?
 
Prediction Market Positives
 
Diversion: For people who like to bet, prediction markets offer a plethora of possibilities. As mentioned above, the types of wagers are virtually limitless, far exceeding the options in sports and casinos. For some, betting is entertainment – something that brings them enjoyment and/or escape from life’s daily challenges.
 
Income: People who are good prognosticators can make money in prediction markets. As the example above from Kalshi illustrated, a person can wager a little or a lot and, if skilled/lucky, earn a sizable return on their ‘investment.’
 
Information: At a minimum, prediction markets allow anyone who visits their sites see what the betting public perceives will be the outcomes of a wide variety of events. Some proponents maintain that the markets “generate real-time information beyond traditional news or intelligence analysis.” (Bloomberg Morning Briefing: The Americas, 3-2-26). Organizations could conceivably use such insights in their planning as part of a situation review or SWOT analysis.
 
Kalshi cofounder Tarek Mansour agrees with that informational utility, arguing that prediction markets are “the most effective way to aggregate information and the crowd wisdom,” and “People don’t lie when money’s involved. You want to be right about your predictions so you don’t lose money.”
 
Hedging: The uncertainly of economic, political, and other events often lead businesses to try to manage financial risk by taking positions on opposite sides of a given outcome. Prediction markets offer such opportunities in ways that would not have been possible decades ago.

For example, Kalshi is reportedly partnering with the insurance company Game Point Capital to help “college athletics departments, sports teams and sponsors to manage the financial risks of performance incentives in athletes’ and coaches’ contracts” (New York Times DealBook, February 10, 2026).
 
Just as there are apparent benefits of prediction markets, there are likely disadvantages.
 
Prediction Market Negatives
 
Time-Sink: Although many different activities can become unproductive, wasteful uses of time, betting in prediction markets seems to hold greater than average potential both because of the exceedingly wide variety of types of trivial bets and because of the addictive nature of gambling where ‘increasing tolerance for [the activity] requires more gambling as time goes on to feel satisfied.”
 
Minimalization of meaningful life events: While the topics of some prediction market bets are clearly trivial, e.g., ‘What will be the top U.S. Netflix show this week?, for others the markets minimize serious topics by encouraging bets to be placed on them. Although Kalshi prohibits wagers involving death, such as the demise of a nation’s head of state, some prediction markets have no such exclusions, and some, like Polymarket, accept bets related to war – see below. Such bets beg the question:
 
Do we want people pulling for destruction and reducing other human beings’ deaths to a wager won?
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Difficult Regulation: While the 39 U.S. states that allow sports gambling regulate it within their own borders and the U.S. Security & Exchange Commission (SEC) regulates the trading of stocks, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) regulates prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket.
 
The CFTC is a long-standing regulatory body that promotes the “integrity, resilience, and vibrancy of the U.S. derivatives markets,” which includes financial products like swaps, futures, collateralized debt obligations, and options. The name derivative comes from the fact that the products are derived from the value of underlying financial assets such  as commodities, stocks, and currencies.
 
A challenge for the CFTC in regulating prediction markets is that unlike the common financial assets listed above that tend to be relatively finite in number, the financial assets underlying prediction markets (bets) are constantly changing, as are the individuals who can potentially influence their values. As such, the CFTC necessarily delegates some of the regulation to the prediction markets themselves, or as it calls them, the “designated contract markets” (DCM). Two of the CFTC’s core principles highlight this delegation:
  • “a DCM is responsible for preventing market manipulation, price distortions, and disruptions in the settlement of contracts.”
  • “DCMs must establish and enforce rules to protect markets and participants from abusive practices, and promote fair and equitable trading.
 
This delegation suggests that regulation of prediction markets is not nearly as tight as that of other derivatives or financial products, which seems to increase the potential for abuse, as the next bullet describes. 
 
Risk of manipulation: Per its website, the SEC is intent on stopping the buying and selling of securities based on material, nonpublic information:
 
“Because insider trading undermines investor confidence in the fairness and integrity of the securities markets, the SEC has treated the detection and prosecution of insider trading violations as one of its enforcement priorities.”
 
Fair treatment of all buyers and sellers is essential for the effective functioning of any market, whether it’s for physical goods or financial products. As the SEC can attest, even when you know organizations’ executives and can track their trading, it’s not easy to maintain market integrity. Fair treatment of all participants is even more challenging in prediction markets where information flow and influence of outcomes is often more obscured.

For instance, one currently trending bet on Polymarket poses a question about a signature esports competition: ‘What will be said at the BLAST Premier Open Rotterdam 2026?’

I’m not familiar with the event, but as it appears 11 cast members will be involved in broadcasting the competition for BLAST.tv, it’s easily imaginable how someone remotely connected to the broadcast could either find out what will be said or influence the dialogue, then either place bets for themselves or advise others’ betting, all while avoiding detection.
 
Betting based on inside information for esports commentary is one thing; betting involving covert military operations is another. “Hours before the U.S. military captured Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, an anonymous user on Polymarket bet tens of thousands of dollars that Mr. Maduro would fall.” The bettor, who some believe may have been a government official with inside information about the operation, pocketed $410,000.
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Similarly suspicious, six newly created Polymarket accounts bet that the U.S. would strike Iran by February 28, and earned about $1 million. Bets on when the U.S. would attack were the only bets the accounts had placed. Apparently, some offshore prediction markets allow betting from anonymous or pseudonym accounts, which makes tracking insider influence all-the more difficult. Such systemic flaws provide a segue into the last point – danger.
 
Danger: Of course, the signaling of secretive military operations through prediction market bets places service personnel at great risk. However, almost anyone who doesn’t confirm, or validate, an event outcome that bettors desire also can be at risk. Such was the case for Times of Israel journalist Emanuel Fabian, who gamblers threatened to kill because the story he wrote about Iranian missile strikes on Israel didn’t support their side of a Polymarket bet.
 
Unfortunately, such gambling-related aggression is not an anomaly. Even in the case of sports betting, a recent NCAA study found that bettors harassed more than a third of Division I men’s basketball players. When money is at stake, people who gamble often don’t take their losses lightly, and sometimes they take out their frustrations on others in violent ways.
 
To plan for future events, individuals and organizations often need to try to predict them, then allocate resources, e.g., time and money, accordingly. Such ‘bets’ are crucial for our own effective functioning, as well as for those who rely on us.
 
That kind of ‘betting’ (i.e., planning) is different than wagering on the outcome of events that don’t involve us. While such betting can offer entertainment, afford income, and provide information, it also carries significant concerns including addiction, financial disaster, and even death. 
 
Anticipating future occurrences for purposes of better planning is wise. Betting on largely irrelevant events invites unnecessary risk and introduces an array of unfavorable outcomes, beyond losing a bet. Encouraging others to play prediction markets may be profitable, but it's an investment in Single-Minded Marketing.
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16 Comments
Hannah Rayner
4/25/2026 06:44:35 pm

I have also noticed this rise in betting on everyday occurrences, which -- aside from the addressed issues of gambling addiction and wasting time -- I don't have much issue with. However, betting on issues such as war, government shutdowns, and death crosses a line. I believe that it is wrong to profit from someone else's suffering; aka, profiting from a. bet made on an aspect of a war. As pointed out in the blog post, this trivializes impactful events that we should all take extremely seriously.

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Sam Jones
4/28/2026 02:17:17 pm

Gambling is an activity that I have seen on the rise among many young people. Sports betting, money winning games, and prediction betting seem to be growing a lot. Even amongst Christian groups sports betting/prediction betting has been seen as not actually betting but rather for fun. This is something that the Bible clearly rejects. I really enjoyed reading this blog. It was very informative on the nature of betting and the pros/cons of it. I believe the cons very much outweigh the pros. It is an easy way to get sucked in and lose money. I thought it was interesting how the blog pointed out that prediction betting shows people raw opinion on topics. This is very true. For example, if I were to wonder how many people in US believe the war in Iran will end before June, I could see bets on Kalshi. Thank you for the blog!

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Ben Graham
4/28/2026 05:02:21 pm

I enjoy watching the thrill of investment and "gambling" in a way, but some people definitely take it too far. I usually make a bracket for march madness, or I invest in sports cards before a season starts of players who I think will do well. I will say you should only use money that you are willing to lose, and I feel like that is where the problem or addiction comes into play. People will see their chance to make it big and will put way too much money on something that they most likely will lose. They then lose and try and win it back. This turns into a cycle, and nobody will stop them because the casino or betting apps are making so much money off them. Kalshi and poly market make it even easier by making you able to bet on anything with the click of a button. It is crazy how far it has gotten and Lord willing it somehow gets shut down. Overall, great blog!!

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Jackson O'Connor
4/28/2026 08:50:29 pm

Prediction markets can be fun in certain scenarios, however, I believe that there are a lot of instances in which they are inappropriate and can be manipulated in negative ways. It is cool that you can gamble on random events, some of them even being funny, but some events that can be bet on are more serious, and being able to bet on them means making light of potentially detrimental events, which is unethical. There are also a lot of risks involved, such as addiction, or manipulation through inside information that can be controlled by people that are in positions to influence the events. These events can often be extremely unpredictable, more so than sports events. Sports are also solely for entertainment, but these are real-life, serious events that should be taken seriously. Because of that, I think that prediction markets should either be regulated or minimized, but I know that is difficult to achieve.

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Angeline Delaluz
4/29/2026 12:07:44 am

I did not realize the increase in involvement when it comes to prediction markets. When reading this article, the first thing that came to mind was how these people are not being good stewards of the money God has given them. They are wasting their money in hopes of getting more in return, but nothing is guaranteed. I do not think betting is good at all, but I also think Kalshi and Polymarket allow the most unnecessary and random bets to occur, which is not good. Not everything needs to be a part of a bet, or maybe nothing at all needs to be a part of a bet at all. I am also worried by the lack of regulations on these prediction markets. With their rising popularity, better regulations need to be put in place before things get out of hand. At the end of the article, there was a mention of people using violence to get their side of the bet to win. This is awful because these prediction markets, in a way, are promoting violence because people will go to extreme measures because their money is on the line. The bets placed on these sites could simply be conversations that you have with a friend, but when put on a prediction market and now money is on the line, it is crazy to see what people will do to gain more money. I do think betting sites like Kalshi and Polymarket should not exist at all, but if they are going to exist, they need to get controlled sooner rather than later.

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Micah K Smith
4/29/2026 12:34:57 pm

I actually have seen a lot about the app Kalshi, which allows these kinds of bets to be placed. I think some of the bets could be fun, but the bets that can be placed on who will be the next government official don't seem like they should be allowed. Obviously, there is a risk factor for getting addicted to gambling, which is a negative to the whole thing as well. I think some of the bets should be minimized, but overall, I think it is okay to be able to bet on things outside of sports.

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Elijah Perry
4/29/2026 03:40:34 pm

My overall opinion on this sort of prediction betting is ultimately negative towards the gambling addiction side of the market, however the entertainment and job creation side is intriguing. It is true that gambling regardless of if it is prediction based on events or sports in general, can create major financial and psychological problems for many regardless of the demographic. However, the user is ultimately in control so therefore I think this sort of prediction gambling in particular should no necessarily continue to exist but indeed will because of entertainment is can bring for many and jobs it creates because of its vast market.

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Dylan Zimmerman
4/29/2026 04:21:46 pm

I believe prediction markets are very harmful because of the appeal to younger demographics. Companies like Kalshi and Polymarket are advertising all over Instagram and TikTok which is commonly used by teenagers and young adults. A lot of these people are looking for a quick way to make money and the marketing team takes advantage of incorporating pop-culture into their ads in order to influence more people to join their sites. Since the regulation on prediction markets are not the same as traditional gambling, anyone 18+ can sign up and start throwing away money like it's nothing. This in turn can foster an addiction for gambling earlier than expected, which might lead to financial struggles in the future.

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Olivia Kirchner
4/29/2026 05:29:10 pm

Prediction markets are interesting to consider, especially as they are so closely linked to gambling. Growing up in a secular society, we are surrounded by advertisements that support betting - whether that's on TV, magazines, or out in public spaces. But in many religious homes or environments, actions like these are not supported. I think that this article illustrates both the pros and cons of prediction markets: while they are a space to bring people together, betting can quickly become out of hand. The main question this article raises for me is where do we draw the line? Predictive betting may be an entertaining way to interact with others, but it is just as easy to become addicted and lose sight of what God has instructed us to consider with our money. Overall, I think that betting for recreation brings many risks that outweigh the positive gains.

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Ezra Masood
4/29/2026 06:03:22 pm

I think that this area of betting is something that gets overlooked everyday. This is because people just normalize it just like things that many of us do today. They think that since everyone does it why can't I. I don't see this as a valid point because this is something you can say to justify it with yourself. Instead we need to look at it through the perspective of God and realize that these things are a problem. Overall, I believe that betting is a problem and just because there are slight positives, the negatives win by a mile.

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Abel Brunk
4/29/2026 07:11:15 pm

Prediction markets might just be harmelss fun, but they deepen the addictive tendencies of gambling, especially in sports leagues like the NBA or NFL where constant betting opportunities keep people hooked. Expanding wagers beyond games into everyday events only amplifies that cycle, turning nearly every outcome into a temptation to bet. What starts as casual fun can quickly become compulsive behavior, draining time, money, and mental focus. Instead of enhancing engagement, this kind of prediction betting risks normalizing gambling as a constant habit. The normalization of betting in our society is dangerous because these things can seriously harm people's mental and emotional states, distance relationships due to lying, and create unnecessary economic troubles for people who are addicted to gambling.

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Alejandro Flores de Valgaz
4/29/2026 10:58:03 pm

Yeah, definitely not a fan of this. I'm not one to advocate for what people should do with their money, but if I were, I would not suggest this. In theory, it seems like a fun thing, without the gambling. But involving money opens the door for so much irresponsibility and corruption, as we saw in the article. I have never been a big gambling guy, though I do love a good game of poker, and this just seems like another pointless way to lose your money.

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Dylan Hart link
4/30/2026 09:53:45 am

I think this article is very interesting. I personally think that the rules are way to loose for these platforms. For example, Ive seen on social media that someone bet one if the Super Bowl will be streaked, and then that person went on and streaked the Super Bowl himself. In comparison with sports betting, there is super strict rules with athletes betting on themselves, with career ending punishments if theyre violated.

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Austin Turner
4/30/2026 10:42:52 am

I think that betting on these things is fine to an extent. I think most people just do it for fun but there are sadly the people who do it for greed. I think that there should be more rules and regulations against these to not have as many ideas about things they could do in order to make a big profit.

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Evan Sarkett
4/30/2026 03:48:51 pm

I believe that gambling should be legal because if it is illegal, oftentimes the demand for gambling is picked up by criminal organizations. The types of wagers that Kalshi offers, however, go beyond sports games or games of chance. Wagers that have to do with military operations or the deaths of people feel more immoral than sports games. I don't know where to define the line, but certain bets around the deaths of people or great suffering should not be legal.

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Sarah Rathert
4/30/2026 10:17:53 pm

It is fascinating how widespread the amounts of money bet and won are--from 40 cents to over a million dollars! From an ethical perspective, it is not financially wise to risk losing large amounts of money. While betting on events that you have reason to believe will turn out a certain way might be considered less risky than betting on a game of chance in a casino, it is still not a sure thing. Sometimes an event may be predictable, but if this is the case, there are probably numerous others already betting on it, so it is not worth investing in for such little payout. I definitely think it is dangerous to have bets about death and war--even though Kalshi prohibits it, other sites do not, and the quantity of people that can come together based on mob mentality around a bet is dangerous.

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