Motley Fool Money - The Rise of Prediction Markets
Episode Date: April 26, 2025This past presidential election was the first where Americans could legally bet on the outcome. That event proved prediction markets to be a source of truth. This episode offers two looks at predicti...on markets. In the first half of the show, Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour joins Ricky Mulvey to discuss: - What he learned about Kalshi from this past election. - The difference between an events contract and gambling. - How prediction markets could disrupt sports betting. Then, New York Magazine Features writer, Jen Wieczner, joins Mary Long to discuss her reporting on the billion-dollar betting platform Polymarket, and its legal challenges in the United States. Read Wieczner’s piece on Polymarket here: https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/is-polymarket-legal-politics-betting-shayne-coplan.html Company discussed: HOOD Hosts: Mary Long, Ricky Mulvey Guests: Tarek Mansour, Jen Wieczner Engineers: Rick Engdahl, Dan Boyd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi everyone, I'm Charlie Cox.
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But the important thing here is that these prediction markets are not a crystal ball.
They're not almighty.
But they're as close as it gets.
They're the best way to forecast the future because of this sort of skin-in-the-game aspect.
People don't lie when their money is involved.
I'm Ricky Mulvey, and that's Kalshi CEO and co-founder Terak Mansour.
On today's show, we're taking two looks at prediction markets,
one from a leader in the industry and another from a journalist telling its story.
In the first part, Mansour spoke with me about how prediction markets can
differ from gambling and his platform is a source of truth.
So a basic question for you, but one that I think is important to your company and for our
listeners understanding Kalshi, what is the difference between an event contract and a bet?
Yeah, that's a great question.
And obviously, we get asked this a lot and it's a central sort of one of the central
questions around prediction markets.
And the way I like to answer a question usually is in some ways sort of to outline that
this question has been consistently asked whenever it came.
to sort of taking new financial markets mainstream.
And so people are not familiar with this,
but when Green Futures first came to the U.S.,
there was a question.
There was actually Supreme Court decision
about whether these are gambling or not.
Are these bets or are they not?
And the answer, where the Supreme Court landed,
it was like, sure, there's a lot of people
that are speculating on these markets.
So speculation is kind of a form of betting.
It's similar in many ways.
But these markets have economic utility
beyond that speculative activity.
and that's what makes them extremely important
and makes them a financial instrument
rather than a bet.
A simpler way to even think about that is,
you know, and I like to think about this
in that different frame,
which is, you know, there are two types of risks,
artificial risks and natural risks.
Now, artificial risk is a risk that you create
for the purpose of speculating on it.
So it's like rolling a dice or doing a roulette spin.
Speculating on that or betting on that
doesn't have really any utility
outside of that activity,
the vetting activity itself.
But something like, will Brexit happen or not?
That's a natural risk.
That's going to happen and impacts people in many ways beyond whether you have a bet or
speculative activity on it or not.
And so like an event contract on Brexit would be something that would qualify as a financial
instrument.
And that's a really different thing from, you know, obviously speculating on a dire role.
Let's get into the sports because your platform now offers, yeah, March Madness
still.
March Madness is still going on at the time.
time in this recording, not when it's being released. What is the economic utility of an event
contracts for the outcome of a sporting event? Just to kind of take a step back. So we have Calshia's
markets on a very broad range of things. So politics, economics, weather, COVID and health, science,
and we recently entered sports. Our entry to sports was sort of due to massive customer demand,
both retail and institutional customers are on Calci today. Obviously, there is an industry,
you know, kind of the sports books and other that offer, you know, markets.
where you go and trade or bet against the house.
Our market is different, and the difference is like here,
like for any of our other event contracts or prediction markets,
it's like a financial market.
It's like a stock market where people are buying and selling these shares
where the event is happening or not.
The types of events we focused on,
so like, for example, you know,
who's going to win the Super Bowl or these title events,
these are like big events that have massive economic ramifications,
both economic and social ramifications,
to the teams, the things are,
around the teams, like the cities, the towns, the localities around them, right? And, you know,
you've seen, there's a bunch of reports that came out and the Eagles one, like that has
drastic economic impact on the city, on the teams, and so on and so forth. And so you can
imagine a lot, and you see there's massive amounts of money that are being invested on these
leagues and these games and sports these days. It's a massive industry that's not, you know,
just a game. And so those people could basically be taking a position to increase our volatility
or hedge their volatility against a bad outcome, which is their team losing.
The other thing is really important is that people care.
One of the functions of financial markets, a bit like going back to the grain futures argument,
was this notion of price basing or basically figuring out what the pricing or the forecast of something is.
At the time, farmers needed to know what the price, the future price of grain was going to be.
The beauty of our markets and prediction markets, they give you a price, which is a forecast
of whether the event is going to happen or not, which can enable people to make better decisions,
figure out where they should invest, and rely on a market-based forecast rather than
pundits saying different things.
I am rooting for your platform to dramatically disrupt the sports betting market, and I think
it will. I think it's an interesting case to be made, especially for economic utility.
If, you know, let's say the Cincinnati Bengals win the Super Bowl next year, there's an economic
impact on that city, and I think that argument is pretty strong.
If you look at something happening this weekend, there's a UFC featherweight
title fight that's also on your platform, Alex Volkinovsky versus Diego Lopez. There's
Volkinovsky's from Australia. So if he wins, there's an economic impact for Australia when
you have the title coming back to that country. When you think about the future of your platform,
though, let's go deeper. Do you see that going across all sports? Because I think that's a strong
argument for a title fight, but the first fight on the preliminary card. Is that something that you
expect to see in the future for Kalshue, do you expect to see sort of the wide range of sports
betting options that one can find on draft kings and Fandul? Are you planning on sticking to those
high impact events? The general answer to sort of what you're asking is, like, do I expect
this to look like a traditional sports book? The answer is no. It probably won't look like a traditional
sports book because there are key differences, right? And so some are regulatory and they're very
critical. And others are even in the business model. And I'll start with the business model. And you've
seen, so our market benefits from concentration. You need these sort of big events that a lot of people
care about or have economic or social impact towards that concentrates volume and liquidity. Our business
gets better and better with more volume, more liquidity. And the reason is because we don't take
bets against the customers, right? Like that's not how we make money. And so for us, we need large
sums of volumes to make money based on our small transaction fees that we take. And you might have seen
some of the results, for example, in March Madness, and I was looking at some of the
reporting, you know, our platform within two months of launch is actually one of the large
players already in the industry in terms of volume traded through the platform. Because our
markets really benefit from volume. And so this is, as a rule of thumb, like, then it makes
more sense for us to concentrate as a business rather than go very, you know, kind of have all
this long tail of different things that you can get exported to or bet on on traditional sports
books. Again, because we don't make money off of someone losing a bet to us. That's just not how
it works from a regulatory perspective we need to focus on markets that have to satisfy to
mean they have to satisfy you know number of core principles are extremely heavily regulated there's 23
core principles we have to abide by but two that are very relevant here so one is around you know the
markets have to have economic relevance and so if a market is kind of totally like doesn't have any sort
of impact or people don't really care about it or or there's the way whether it goes one way or the other
doesn't matter in any way shape or form to anybody then it's kind of hard to
for us to do and doesn't really fit in our model. And number two is they have to be not readily
susceptible to manipulation. There's another really key thing that we think about. When you think
about designing a marketplace that has market integrity and fairness, you have to put up things that are
not easily manipulable, where for example, like a player decides to do something, even if the
economic gain is very limited, they could still do it because it's very easy to do it. And so those
are the two things that we think about that make us pretty different, really fundamentally
different from what you would see in a traditional sports book.
So we'll stay on manipulability.
Manipulability, is that the word?
Anyway, the ability to manipulate a market, because I want to get to the visibility in your
market in a second, which I think is incredibly important and groundbreaking, really,
what you're doing for retail speculators.
But the ability to manipulate things, one of the things you can bet on is whether or not
someone will say a word.
So what Caroline Levitt will say at a Trump press conference, whether or not the CEO of
Netflix will say gaming.
in the next earnings call, to me, that's the thing where I wonder if that can be manipulated.
Let's say I'm an investment analyst who's going to be on the Netflix earnings call, and I place
a bet on gaming. I don't hear it in the comments up top, but I've got a bet on gaming.
So that's going to inform what question I ask the CEO at the bottom.
For manipulating in sports, that's one where, let's say, I'm going to go back to, we'll
use the UFC example. There's consequences beyond the bet to manipulating a fight. If someone
loses a fight, there are physical and career consequences for that. But if I'm an investment analyst
and I'm just like, you know what, I'm going to ask this question about gaming, that seems almost
like a harmless manipulation outside of the prediction market. So how are you thinking about manipulation,
especially with what word will someone say in a press conference? Totally. And I think that's a great
question. And I will say it's kind of like a few things to think about here. One is, so the rules around
Kalshi and the way that it's structured is very similar to.
traditional financial market. So very simple analogy is the stock market.
Right? If people trade based on insider information or you're trying to
manipulate a stock for the purpose of gain, that is actually illegal. And there's a
whole kind of suite of systems in the New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ and so on and
so forth that have been built over the years to flag this type of activity,
figure out who did it, and then you can prosecute these people appropriately. And so
it's the same exact thing on CalShe. So we, you know, have developed over the years
and that was a big thing you might know some of the history of the
company, we spend three years getting regulated up front so that we can be legal.
And today we're the only legal broad prediction market in the U.S.
with the CFT to develop some of these systems to figure out how do we preserve market integrity
and make sure that these types of activities are not happening.
And so a few things.
First, we KIC everybody.
So we know who's trading on the product.
You know, we know everything about them.
Second, every trade, all the trades go through our systems, our surveillance systems
that flag any unusual patterns or patterns of erratic or statistically weird behaviors.
And then those go to our investigation team that runs investigation.
And these are happening every hour, every day.
You know, we have a whole team that basically does these.
And if we flag someone doing something like this,
like they can be prosecuted from a fine all the way to criminal prosecution.
These are same as typical, you know, what you would see in traditional financial markets.
And so my answer to this at a high level is like,
this is pretty much on par with that investment analyst trying to manipulate a stock
by asking a certain question or saying something on that earnings call.
And so that person, if they did that, they wouldn't be allowed to take a trade.
And if, you know, even if they tried to come up with some smart ski,
you know, if the money is sizable enough, if it's, if it matters, we're probably going to find it
and they're going to be prosecuted. So, so that would be a crime. Different markets have different
sort of susceptibility to manipulation, but, you know, earnings calls have quite, quite stringent
rules around them. They're not, same with the Fed, by the people, people ask about the Fed a lot.
Like, what Powell will say in a speech, you know, that moves, like, that moves trillions of dollars
in the economy, right? Like, if he says, you know, if he's slightly more hawkish than expected or more
bear you know, that's why they kind of script, you know, the power script is, is very well scripted
beforehand. And there's rules around it because if someone leaks it before to the bond market or
other, you can, you know, can have drastic move before the speech. And I think it's very similar here.
One of the things I really appreciate your about your market is the visibility into what's going
on. So yes. You can see trading volume for stocks on, if you go on Schwab, that kind of thing.
But especially on the speculation side for something like a March Madness game,
Craft Kings is not listing the betting volume for each game, whereas your platform, it does.
Your platform also, you can see what people are betting on. You can see the live trade order flow,
which is also something for stock markets. That's something that is not available to retail participants.
Yes.
What's your, you know, I'm throwing, I asked you some hard questions. I'll throw you some flowers.
What's your philosophy on making these markets visible to the retail participants?
Why is it important to you to make all of, basically all of your markets?
it's visible to everybody on your platform.
Absolutely.
And, you know, one comment on the hard question is like, you know,
please keep them coming.
I mean, I love the hard questions in some ways.
Any new type of financial innovation should and needs to be kind of met with some degree
of healthy skepticism.
And that healthy skepticism is the thing that pushes us to improve over time.
That's sort of this nice feedback loop that improves these financial markets to get
to the study state they should get to.
So I've always been a fan of these types of debates and, you know, hopefully you'll throw
more at me.
But so look, this is a great point.
Transparency has been a very.
core piece of the mission and the vision for prediction markets. That's the whole point. We want
a market-based mechanism to price the future. We don't want the pricing to be a book. We don't
want the pricing to be an analyst or a pundit or one single market maker or so on and so forth. We want
it to be this sort of wisdom of the crowd's aspect. We bring a variety of people with diverse
opinions. Some of them may be from Wall Street, but actually on Kaoshi, a lot of them are not the
top hedge fund manager and the top person. We tell individuals that love reading the news, know a lot
about politics and feel like they don't have an edge in traditional financial markets because
the large hedge funds have all the edge and all the asymmetric information. Whereas on CalShe,
information is equal. And that's a very big part of this. Like, we want everything to be out there.
The price at any point in time, how the price comes to be, who's trading where? And you see,
if you open Calci right now on the Masters or on our economic or any of our markets, you see the
live trades, as you mentioned. Who is trading what? What is the size that's going on either side?
And we don't want anyone to pay for that. That's open source. It's free. It's free.
You can access it even if you're not a member of the product.
And this is really, really kind of in vain with creating a level playing field
where anyone can beat anyone else.
If they're looking to do research, to get smart about the future, and be better.
And it will give you one anecdote about this.
And this is something that really makes us kind of really happy at the company,
these types of anecdotes about our customers, which is I always tell people,
so Calci has been the most accurate forecast for politics.
We saw it at the election.
economic, you know, inflation and so on and so forth.
And I've been asking people like, hey, guess who has been the best inflation forecaster?
Who has the best ROI return our investment on our inflation markets in the last two to three years?
People come in and guess, and we have some hedge funds on the product and market makers and, like, you know, really kind of institutional players.
And they usually guess some of those typical players.
But actually, the answer is it's a random dude from Kansas.
Never traded financial markets before.
It doesn't trade options.
This person is an avid news reader, reads the news every day.
likes to be engaged with what's going on with the economy,
what's going on with geopolitics,
what's going on with a variety of different things.
And they ended up being pretty sharper
where the economy is heading.
And those are types of people that are making real money.
Now is their full-time job on CalShite.
And if we weren't transparent,
if there wasn't an extreme transparency to the platform,
where you're trading against other people
and you can see everything out in the open,
it'd be harder for these people to beat the books
or the traditional hedge funds,
which is kind of counter to what we're trying to build.
If this gentleman in Kansas is available for podcasts, our email is Podcasts at Fool.com.
I hope he has an external microphone.
We'd be very curious to talk to him about the macro economy if he's truly the best on your platform.
There was a fundamental event for Kalshi, and that was the presidential election.
That was where you got the most attention on your platform, and it was groundbreaking,
where you were the first legal market in the United States where people could bet on the election.
Now that we're a few months past that, even though it feels like a lifetime ago,
what did you learn about your market in speculative behavior from the 2024 presidential election?
A few things that led us to the election.
So the history of Calci is we first spent three years upfront,
getting regulated by the federal government to get a license from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
to operate the first derivatives exchange that can list prediction markets legally in the U.S.
Then we operated for a while.
We wanted to list the election market, but our regulator believed that we should not list it
and blocked us from listing it.
We sued a regulator and took them to federal court over this election market, and we won
that lawsuit a few weeks before the presidential election last year.
Once we won that lawsuit, we legalized election markets and really a broad suite of prediction
markets, event contracts, in the United States.
And for reference, election markets have been illegal since the Great Depression.
And so we've opened up the ability to trade on the election based on our lawsuit.
Once we won that lawsuit, we have grown at an unprecedented rate.
It was truly incredible, and I'll give some stats.
So we did $2 billion of volume in the span of a month, month and a half after we won.
We were number one on the app store overtaking chat, GPT, Instagram, TikTok, and a number of other apps.
On election day, we were the largest out of all prediction markets by quite a bit.
and we got around 500 million unique people visiting our site.
So that's a substantial chunk of people in the world.
And so what we've seen is like, first of all,
the entire planet really cares about U.S. elections.
And this might be obvious, but I think we've kind of,
now we have real data to prove that.
Number two, there was a period in time around the end of the day
where our number of site visits overtook CNN and Fox.
And that was a sign where people did not know where to look.
because if you looked at CNN, they were saying one candidate is winning, Harris.
And if you looked at Fox, they were saying that Trump is winning.
And people kind of didn't know where to look.
So they came to us, the prediction markets where people have their money where their mouth is to figure out who's winning and what was going on.
And so that was really incredible.
And it was amazing because it worked.
Right.
Like we, you know, I don't know if you saw the announcement.
So we announced Don Jr. joining as an advisor in January.
And a big part of why ended up being rallied about the mission.
And he tweeted about this was how, you know, and Marlago,
they were using the app and the site,
and they were looking at the odds for figuring out who was going to win,
which was kind of this, we've come a long way, right?
Like this was a niche internet thing to now being totally mainstream
and people are kind of using it normally.
But it worked, you know, and people were saying that these markets,
you know, were biased or manipulated and so on,
but actually you saw that the polls were all at 50-50
and calcium, other prediction markets were at 62, 63%.
And so the prediction markets were right.
And I think now there's this sort of moment
where people realize like we should embrace this technology.
It's working.
It's being used.
And we've seen now, and I've talked about this,
like Doge and Elon Musk uses our markets
to inform how much they're going to be cutting in federal spend.
A number of federal agencies and economic Fed
and others are pulling our market data
to figure out how to influence economic and government
policy over time.
Same with institutions and businesses.
But the important thing here is that these prediction
markets are not a crystal ball.
They're not all mighty.
But they're as close as it gets.
They're the best way to forecast the future
because of this sort of skin in the game aspect.
That people don't lie when their money is in.
involved. I don't begrudge any financial institution for lobbying or trying to get close to politics.
You mentioned Donald Trump Jr. is a strategic advisor. What strategy is he advising you on? What are
those conversations like right now? Yeah, I mean, I think people always mention things like, you know,
lobbying and other. I mean, look, we are not a, we're not a partisan company. Like, that's very
important to understand. We have Democrats and Republicans involved with a company, both at the board level
and obviously in the company itself. And so what we are is we're believers.
in the mission that we're focused on.
And so anyone that agrees with that mission,
I think we would welcome them
and we'd hope for them to come and help us.
And that's true for both sides of the aisle.
And I think it's specifically when it comes to Don Jr.,
it's Don, and actually the Trump family for a decade now
have been big fans of going direct,
talking to people directly.
So Twitter is obviously a big part of it,
truth, social, and so on.
And part of it is like, you know,
generally the media has been sort of pretty adverse to Trump.
And so the intermediaries didn't really work out for them,
so they had to go direct and talk directly to the people.
And X was a big vehicle for that.
And I think of prediction markets are being very complementary to that,
which is going direct, being directly involved with the people
and this sort of wisdom of the crowds or decentralization of news, right?
Like X, like you go on X to get news from people,
not from an authority or an institution like a newspaper,
and you go to prediction markets to get news about the future from people, from markets.
And I think these two gel very, very well together.
And, you know, Donner's been a pretty big fan for prediction markets.
Obviously, when they went mainstream at the end of the year, that's, you know, that's kind of heightened the interest.
Advising all things go to market.
We're expanding to new jurisdiction.
The new types of markets that may be actually useful and may help us educate, you know, this is going very mainstream.
Now we have millions of customers.
Like, how do we take it to the next 100 million customers?
And I think, you know, he's going to be very helpful with that.
He's been very helpful with that over the last few months.
You talked about going direct to market.
I think your platform is incredibly useful.
for things like odds of a recession.
People have to put their money where their mouth is.
It's not just opinions from an economist.
We talked about the election.
There's stories that can be told within your platform.
Right now, Kamala Harris and Stephen A. Smith have the same percent chance on your market
of being the 2028 Democratic nominee.
I know you've talked about the TikTok ban before.
When you look at the chart of that on your platform up and down the volatility in that,
even the Jeff Epstein files getting released, you can see.
see people's belief wavering going up and down. Is there a story from your market that you
find yourself thinking about a lot? There's so much interest around a variety of different things.
And each market, and you might have seen this, there's a calcium idea section below the market,
which is this notion that it's a bit like X, but you can only post, it's a bit like Twitter,
but you can only post if you have a position in the market. And it's beautiful because people
are talking about, you know, sometimes they're making jokes and so on, but often they're talking
about the analysis behind their positions. Why do I think TikTok is going to get bad? Why do I think
that Gavin Newsom has, you know, no chance of being a Democratic nominee? And, you know, I believe
that Stephen A. Smith has actually a pretty big chance. And I think the odds right now are a buy. And I think
the odds are mispriced. And the beauty of that is like, you can actually craft that story from this
community that, like, is doing all this research and they're putting money where their mouth is. So look, I mean,
I think right now, the story on Kalshi is that there's a lot of volatility.
And you see it in the odds, right?
Like, the odds of a recession are moving a lot.
And the beauty is these markets work.
If you trust that these markets work and they are kind of accurate at every point in time.
And if the odds are constantly moving, so they were at 70% two days ago, three days ago,
now they're back at 50%, 55%.
That just tells you that right now there's a lot of volatility and instability in financial markets.
Or really the system more broadly.
And we see it across politics, geopolitics, economics, economics,
financial markets, even things like science and technology.
It's kind of like anything is fair a game.
And like, you know, in some ways, if anyone is on the news right now
telling you making these bold assumptions and predictions about exactly what's going to happen,
they're probably being over certain and overconfident.
They're probably wrong.
And our markets are basically showing that volatility today.
So we'll see how what happens.
Recession market has been extremely heavily quoted in the last few days.
And I think it's because people don't know what's going to happen.
I think they want to know, like, are we going to recession or not?
And right now the odds are, you might have checked them, Ricky, but I think they're like 55%.
Above 60.
Oh, 64%.
They're back at 64.
Oh, wow.
They're back up.
Oh, yeah.
So, you know, two-thirds chance of a recession this year.
The other thing going on, there are people that are not big fans of Kalshi, and that includes
casino lobbies.
You've gotten cease and desist orders from Nevada, Maryland, Illinois, Montana, New Jersey, Ohio.
I understand the arguments that you're not a gambling pool because you're not trading against a casino.
trading against other players, so it's a little bit different. But just broadly, what's it like
going up against a casino lobbies? What's that experience like for you? Yeah, I mean, look, I don't,
I don't think of it that way. I honestly don't think of it. I mean, there's a lot of headlines,
a lot of news. And, you know, the thing I say sometimes, like, don't trust the news too much.
Like, the news loves to create sort of these like duels and fights and this kind of tension because,
you know, news is tension. You want to see what's happening in the background and so on.
So, you know, actually a lot of like the operators, I mean, we're having a lot of very constructive dialogues with them.
And so you see, we have Calci.com, Calci Direct, where people go to Calci directly and become members of the exchange and they trade with us.
But the traditional go to market for exchanges, like the New York Stock Exchange or CME, is you don't go to CME or the New York Stock Exchange to buy an option or a stock, right?
You go to Schwab and Robin Hood.
That's where you go.
You go to your broker, your financial broker.
And so right now we're launching brokers.
So we've launched Robin Hood and Rebo.
We have something like 10 to 12 brokers in the pipeline today.
And that's going to be a big part of our go-to-market for a year.
And that canon will include a lot of the sports operators that see kind of,
they want to get into a financial market offering or a prediction market offering
that will be powered by Calci.
And so in many ways, what people are viewing as sort of this very conflictual competition
is actually much more complementary and looks a lot more like a partnership
than people are sort of like thinking about.
Because people are thinking like, yeah, the prediction market offering is not actually that competitive, you know, player props and all these different things that the books usually do.
And definitely not Icasino, which is what casinos really do.
We are offering really have nothing to do with that.
But it's much more of a complement of like, could we provide odds to the participants in those products and could there be just much more of a healthy emerge?
And I think a lot of operators in the space see that.
And that's why they're talking to us and, you know, working on partnerships with us and so on and so forth.
So I think the premise is not quite right.
I think, yes, so we do have some lawsuits right now
with some of the states that believe that they have jurisdiction over this.
And you know, you might have seen the Nevada,
the federal court in Las Vegas and Nevada kind of ruling against Nevada in this first step
or ruling in favor of our preliminary injunction because our message has been very clear.
Like financial markets are regularly at the federal level, right?
You can trade stocks anywhere in the U.S.
It's regularly at federal level.
So if it's a state one day bans trading stocks,
you can still trade stocks and a state because that's how the constitution and the law works.
And it's a similar thing for anything that in exchange, what we call a DCM, which is what we are,
does at the CFTC level.
I mean, I understand constructive dialogue, but they, you also, you got casino lobbies selling you cease and desist letters,
which is usually not a let's keep talking kind of thing.
But I understand, you're offering something different from the sports books and the casinos.
Look, my point wasn't about everyone, right?
like I think anything new that's sort of disrupting the potential like a mechanism or industry and so on,
like obviously will come with as always a healthy degree of skepticism. And so I'm not saying that
this is everybody in the industry. I think there's a lot in the industry that I think are looking
to partner and work constructively. And we want to work with anyone, anyone that's willing to partner
and work with us. And then some that sort of maybe like are more resistance and are still sort of
figuring out what they want to do with this. To be clear, we didn't receive any citizens from casinos
rather. We received from states, which is they're not the same parties. So that's important
to flag here. Again, not everybody, but hopefully over time will rally more and more.
I think the pie of people that are basically getting excited about this is growing in that industry.
You also recently announced a partnership with Robin Hood. I know it's early days, but how do you
expect that to impact activity on your platform? And what do you expect Kalshi to do for
Robin Hood? Yeah. I mean, so right now we have Robin Hood and Weble launch in the product. We have
around 10 to 12 other brokerages that are in the process of integrating and hopefully launching sometime
this year. Partnership has been extremely successful.
And the way we see it is very similar, right?
Like financial broker like Robin Hitchwa, Fidelity, Weble, and so on.
What they do is they, you know, they list products that are exchanged traded,
whether it's stocks or commodities or options, even crypto now more recently.
And, you know, one of the markets are exchanged traded today.
Really the fastest growing one and the most exciting one is prediction markets,
is the markets are listed on Calci.
And as a regulated exchange, we know different than New York Stock Exchange or CME,
and we, over time, are going to put more and more of our markets.
or prediction markets next to stocks and options in the brokerages so that people can kind of
really benefit from this sort of diversity of offering. It's like I can have my stocks position,
like I can have my Tesla positions, for example, and I can hedge against Tesla earnings or against
the Fed raising interest rates or other types of things that may go on in the world around me
in one comprehensive portfolio. And we're extremely excited about that sort of direction for
where this can be heading. So, you know, the partnership has been extremely successful. We expect
and anticipate, you know, quite a few launches in the coming quarters in terms of brokerages.
And I, you know, we're very excited about that part of the business.
Tarek Mansour, who's the CEO, co-founder of Kalshi.
Thank you so much for your time and your insight.
Appreciate you joining us on Maliful Money.
Thanks for having me, Ricky.
This was awesome.
There's another major player in prediction markets.
It's called polymarket.
This one runs on crypto and is currently not legal in the United States.
Americans have to use a VPN if they want to play on the platform.
After the break, New York Magazine features writer Jen Veetchner joins my colleague Mary Long
to talk about how Polly Market achieved escape velocity in a crowded field
and the chance it will become legal in the U.S. in the next few years.
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Jen Bietchner is a features writer for New York Magazine.
Her latest story is a profile on Shane Copland, the founder of the prediction market,
Polly Market.
Jen, to kick us off, I'm going to quote, a quote from Copland that you use in your story.
He told you, quote, I mean, the plan is to build something that didn't yet exist and needed to exist
that I cared more about than anyone else.
That's the end of the quote.
this is interesting to me because tech titans like to sell us a lot of stuff that they say we need,
but that maybe we don't actually need. Why does Copland believe Polymarket needs to exist?
So it's interesting. I think a lot of people see Polymarket as a betting site, but he doesn't.
He sees it as sort of an alternative source of quote-unquote truth, you know, a potential alternative to news,
you know, in a way to kind of gain information that isn't readily available, you know, in kind of the mainstream
news landscape that we have. In other words, you know, this is a way of kind of sourcing information.
You could call it crowd sourcing. There have been other attempts to kind of, you know, harness the
wisdom of the crowds, but nobody has really been able to get it to a mainstream scale where you can
actually learn something about what the, like, large part of the world is thinking this kind
of critical mass of people. And so that is what he would, he set out to achieve. You know,
how could you tap into the wisdom of the crowds in a way that nobody had yet
done where you could actually glean some real insights and make predictions that were better than
pundits or what you would see on TV or hear from the news. And interestingly, and perhaps
importantly, too, Polly Market called the election. And so post that win, Copland posted on X that
polymarket single-handedly called the election before anything else. The global truth machine is here
powered by the people. This wisdom of the crowd's approach is interesting to me. But when I read that,
I think, okay, yes, Polymarket got the election right, and I don't want to downplay that.
And I think there's something compelling about the idea that, okay, when you're using prediction
markets, you're not betting against the house, you're just putting money on whatever you think
the outcome will be.
But I'm skeptical if that actually makes it a verifiable truth teller.
Is there a running track record of the percentage of bets made on Polymarket, the final
outcome that is predicted by the crowds?
and then what percentage of those predictions actually turn out to be correct?
If it's pitched by Shane as this is the truth, is there like a running tab of how often
they are actually right?
I have not seen one, like a report card for prediction markets.
That would be really useful.
I do know that on the ones that really mattered, you know, would Biden drop out of their race,
huge.
You know, would Sam Altman return as CEO of Open AI after, you know, they tried to oust him
and who would win the election?
they have, you know, a very good track record, you know, as do some of the other kind of leading
prediction markets such as Kalshi, but Polymarking has kind of made themselves into the gold standard
for most things. Notably, everybody got wrong, you know, that Beyonce was going to be at the
DNC, including Polymarket, which I think is sort of a notable, kind of a funny one of one where they
did not get right. But they were sort of, you know, still with, even people, I think, who were kind
of close to the situation thought that Beyonce was coming. So I give them a little bit of a pass there.
But I wish there was something like you're describing. Who was actually on this platform? Because
when I think about it, the image that comes to my mind is, okay, it's mostly regular people.
And they're making miscellaneous bets on everything from like, okay, who wins the presidential election?
Will Beyonce be at the Super Bowl to whether Blake lively and Ryan Reynolds are going to get a
divorce this year? Is there institutional money playing too? Or is that, hey, it's mostly normies,
for lack of a better word. Is that pretty accurate?
No, I think probably a large part is, you know, these professional traders, Wall Street types. Hedge fund managers, I mean, we even saw, you know, the so-called French whale who made a big bet on Donald Trump is an institutional investor. There's a lot of hedge funds that are actually using polymarket to potentially hedge their own bets. As, you know, they've put a bet in the stock market that's based on, you know, some kind of prediction about something geopolitical or macroeconomic. And they want to hedge that by also putting money on polymarket, which I think is an interesting.
So I would say, you know, as I talk to people, I hear a lot of people in finance and crypto who are
really excited about this. Of course, there's people like me, you know, and others who just kind of
want to bet on the Oscars. But I do think most of the money is coming from that professional
institutional side. In your conversations with Shane, does the fact that so much of this money
is seemingly coming from the institutional side, does that corrupt at all in his mind, this
wisdom of the crowds, like this democratization of truth concept that he seems really excited about?
Yeah, so I should be clear, I don't know 100% that it's coming from the institution. That's sort of my sense based on who I've been talking to. But I don't think in his mind that it corrupts it. I think, you know, he sees this as a platform for everyone, you know, the way that Amazon is a store for everyone. But he has talked about potentially the future business models and how, you know, polymarket, which doesn't currently make any money, could eventually gather revenue by, you know, saying charging hedge funds a fee to list their own markets. And so I think they,
see this as, you know, kind of one avenue, but they wouldn't want it to, we wouldn't want to
limit it to only, you know, professionals. Thanks for mentioning that Polymarket does not actually
make any money at the moment. That was fascinating to me in reading your piece. For those less
familiar, Polymarket was the most downloaded free news app on the Apple store this fall and
processed more than $3 billion on the presidential election alone. And despite that, as you write,
it's still in world eating expansionary mode. It does not collect fees. It does not actually make any
money at the moment. Do you have a sense of when that might change? You mentioned, okay, maybe
they would turn to hedge funds and not charge the individual person that's going on in betting,
but do you have a sense of kind of what the actual business plan might be moving forward?
That's a very good question. You know, Shane was kind of strangely unconcerned about it when I,
when I spoke with him. He's not in a rush to make money. I'll put it that way. He sees,
he really wants to gain growth and mainstream audience and get.
as many millions of people using polymarket to make it the most accurate, you know,
source of predictions before they actually start charging. You know, they could charge everybody
a small transactivity. I feel like he sees it as sort of an easy change to make when the time comes.
You know, you flip a switch. Suddenly everybody's getting charged a small cut. You charge hedge
funds a little bit more, maybe, you know, to list their own markets. But basically he's saying
when there is money flowing through, the more money that you have that people are wagering on their
own predictions, the easier it's going to be for the business to actually make money, just because
there's so much sort of money in the ecosystem. Joey Krug was the founder of a blockchain-based
backed prediction market that's now since shut down, but he was an early investor in Pali Market.
And you write in your story that Kroog was skeptical of Shane's pitches at first. In fact,
he told Shane that, quote, prediction markets are one of the hardest types of startups to build.
There are dozens of them and none of them hit escape velocity. Today, 90% of all prediction market
activity happens on polymarket. It seems to me like it has hit escape velocity. What's the story of
how exactly it got there? I asked a lot of people this question. And what everyone pointed to was
just Shane's own determination. He was so determined that he was going to make this work,
working around the clock, tweeting, you're sending every single thing he put on Twitter or
X to all of his investors to try to gain traction, asking them to make bets, making it happen.
You know, so I think that's part of it. Another part of it is just branding.
They've been, you know, kind of made themselves sort of the go-to prediction market.
They're also, you know, available to the whole world rather than just limited to the U.S.
as others have been.
And then I think they just kind of made it fun.
It's very easy to use, even though it's based on crypto, which allows kind of this ease of use.
They're not doing, you know, some of the know-your-customer kind of regulatory hurdles that some other platforms do,
which allows you to get on and put your money to work very quickly.
And if you're in the U.S., you do have to use a VPN. But I think, you know, those few decisions
and just combined with Stein's own persistency, he was, he's just so passionate about that.
And I think you kind of need all those ingredients together. You mentioned that if you're in the U.S.,
you do need to use a VPN to use Pauly Market. This is important to note, and it's an essential
piece of your article, because while Pollymarket has seen massive success, it is an illegal
operation in the United States and in France and Singapore.
and Thailand and Belgium. This is because prediction markets are considered events contracts under
U.S. law, so they need to be regulated by the CFTC so that companies that want to offer such contracts
have to apply for permission to do that. Polymarket's not done that. Again, your story opens with
an arrest of Shane, a raid by the FBI in his house. Polymarket hasn't filed for this license.
Why? What is stopping it from doing that? You mentioned regulatory hurdles. That seems like,
yes, a hurdle, but a smart one to jump over.
I would agree that that is the most obvious path.
I think what happened was when they first started out, they just skipped ahead to it.
He was young.
He wanted this to kind of put this online as fast as possible and didn't bother to sort of check
the laws and go through those regulatory hurdles up front thinking that if I just build
something, if I build something that's great and then I make it popular and people will love it,
then it will all just work out that people will welcome this.
And that's not exactly what happened, especially under, you know, the Biden administration prediction markets were very taboo.
And you have the CFTC cracking down on unregulated platforms like this.
And so very early on, you know, within months of their launch, really, they're dealing with an investigation from the CFTC that they eventually have to pay a pretty big fine for, especially for a young startup.
With that settlement, they basically agree to not offer to U.S. customers.
that sort of closed off that path for the time being.
And now I think that they are likely going to reconsider that,
especially under the Trump administration,
which is not just friendlier to crypto,
but much more friendly to prediction markets as it appears so far.
And Trump could potentially just kind of give them a hall pass,
right, an executive order.
All prediction markets are legal now, you know,
something like that, which would give them an even faster shortcut.
Or, you know, they're going to have to work with their lawyers
of whom they have a lot and find a reality.
regulatory path, whether it's through that application or, you know, kind of trying to overturn the
CFTC settlement. A key question that you raise is, like, whether or not this illegality even
matters, as you mentioned, okay, Trump could give them a hall pass. You've been in this story for a while now.
You want to take a 50-50 bet on how this plays out over the next 12 months? Do you have a prediction?
Will Polly Market become legal in the U.S.? Or will they just kind of keep moving forward as is?
I do. And I asked all of my sources this question as well. And by and large, everyone gave it above a
50% chance that they would become legal, you know, in the next year or two. I think, yeah, like the next
year to 18 months, I have a feeling they will be legal. You know, as part of the story actually went on,
used a VPN and illegally traded on polymarket, very, very small amounts. But it doesn't feel
meaningfully different to me than trading on Robin Hood, where you can also, you know, buy extremely
risky stocks or anything, you know, I'm policing bets on who's going to win the Oscars, who's
going to win the Super Bowl, you know, or what's Trump going to do next? What's Elon Musk?
to write on X or how many times is he going to post. It's kind of silly things that, you know,
sure, if you want to lose your money that way, like I don't really see, you know, the harm in doing it.
You could make money. But I don't really see a reason for it to be less legal than all the other
forms of risky but legal trading that we already have. Yeah, yeah, fair point for sure.
Another prediction market that does exist legally in the U.S. is Kalshi. They exist without crypto,
though. Whereas Polly Market, you can solely use Kirst.
crypto to make bets there. What is the fascination with crypto? I know Shane has a long history with
Ethereum, but why limit yourselves to just crypto? Why do they like to stay in that lane?
I think they've built their whole system on top of blockchain, which allows for these bets to
settle on the blockchain. And so they're using actually smart contracts, which gives in some ways
the outcomes of these bets an objective referee, if that makes sense, where it's not so
subjective, they set the rules and these smart contracts are just going to settle the way that they are.
All the bets are also placed in crypto because it allows people this anonymity that then, you know,
kind of makes them more likely or less afraid of betting on their beliefs because they can do it
without kind of fear of people, you know, finding this out. Some of the other platforms have similar
formats. But I think, you know, this was a way to open it up to the world very quickly, you know,
and kind of, you know, skirt the regulations that also come with using dollars.
And polymarkets not actually handling any of the money because it's all just settled through smart
contracts. So they don't actually have to be the bank. And Shane, it speaks to his strengths as well
because he was early in Ethereum. It became very passionate about crypto, you know,
while he was basically still in high school. You paint this picture of Shane early in his 20s.
So it's around 2016. And at that time, he's running pretty deep in the crypto crowd. But at some
point through that he grows relatively disillusioned with that scene. You write that he, quote,
became unimpressed with what he calls the build a bear lineup of copycat startups and crypto
scams. That's his wording scans. You spent a lot of time with him. How now does he distinguish
between the scammy side of crypto and what he might deem to be the more righteous side of it?
Yeah. So one of the most ironic parts about Shane is that despite running a platform that's
technically illegal and having had to deal with the regulatory consequences of that,
He sees himself as the good guy, as, you know, the person who's built a platform that should be legal, that's useful, that's popular, that, you know, people really love.
And he's providing an important service in the landscape of news and information.
Whereas in the past, he saw, you know, people who were basically less hardworking than himself take a lot of money but not follow through on actually building it or builds a sort of wonky platform that wasn't that great or wasn't good enough to gain mainstream attention.
and what they built didn't match up to what they promised.
And Shane, who talks a huge game.
Like this guy, he's just, you know, his ambitions are off the charts.
He really believes that he's going to make it happen.
And he swears he's not going to stop until he does.
So I think he's raised a large amount of venture capital.
And he just believes in himself to the point where, you know, I'm going to just do this.
I'm going to build this until it's legal.
It's going to be, you know, something that's as useful as the,
other technology that we rely upon. I mean, he's a big fan of Uber and Apple and these kind of
meta on Facebook. He's admired these CEOs and entrepreneurs for a long time. And he really
sees himself as, you know, one of those kind of big tech giants as opposed to these anonymous
crypto scammers who don't even, you know, use their real name, even as they're raising money
and trying to build stuff. He puts himself in a different category. As always, people on the
program may have interests in the stocks they talk about in the Motley Fool may have formal
recommendations for or against. So don't buy ourselves stocks based solely on what you hear.
All personal finance content follows Motley Full editorial standards and are not approved by advertisers.
The Motley Full only picks products that it would personally recommend to friends like you.
I'm Riky Malvey. Thanks for listening. We'll be back on Monday.
