As the internet enters the "information financialization" phase, markets are no longer limited to trading stocks, commodities, or crypto assets. An increasing number of platforms are now experimenting with trading "future events themselves." The core objective of a Prediction Market is to harness real capital and market dynamics, enabling the crowd to form real-time probability assessments of the future. For instance, events like U.S. presidential elections, the Fed's interest rate decisions, inflation data, and even weather changes can all be turned into marketable assets.
Kalshi is one of the most prominent compliant prediction market platforms in the United States and one of the few Event Contracts Exchanges approved by the CFTC. Unlike traditional gambling sites, Kalshi does not rely on a fixed-odds model. Instead, it builds a market system where participants trade around future events.
Kalshi’s flagship product is the Event Contract.
Each market centers on a real-world event. For example:
“Will the Fed cut interest rates this year?”
Users can buy either YES or NO.
If the event occurs, the YES contract settles at $1; if it does not, the NO contract settles at $1.
In essence, users are trading the probability that a given event will happen.
Kalshi contract prices always trade between $0 and $1.
For example:
As market expectations shift, the price moves accordingly. For instance, after a key economic data release, if the market suddenly leans toward a Fed rate cut, the YES contract could jump from $0.45 to $0.75 in a short time.
Thus, Kalshi’s pricing system is effectively a real-time probability market.
Kalshi employs an Order Book mechanism—not the fixed-odds model typical of betting platforms.
Users can place their own orders, choosing bid prices, ask prices, and position sizes. The system then automatically matches buyers and sellers.
Example:
When the two transact, the market price is formed.
This structure is much closer to a stock exchange or futures market. The price isn’t set by the platform; it emerges from the collective actions of participants.
Once an event outcome is officially announced, Kalshi settles the market according to predefined rules.
Each market specifies in advance:
For example, a market like “Will U.S. CPI exceed 3%?” might use data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) as the final arbiter.
If YES is correct, YES contracts settle at $1 and NO contracts become worthless. If the event doesn’t occur, the opposite applies.
Such clear rule design is a cornerstone of the stable operation of any Prediction Market.
Kalshi does not require users to hold contracts until settlement. Because the market trades in real time, users can sell at any point after a price change.
For example: A user buys YES at 40¢. The price later rises to 70¢. Even if the event hasn’t concluded, the user can sell early for a profit.
This gives Kalshi a blend of attributes: probability trading, short-term speculation, and even risk hedging.
Although Kalshi’s markets may look similar to gambling, the underlying logic is fundamentally different.
On traditional betting sites, the platform sets fixed odds and users bet against the house. Kalshi, by contrast, behaves like a financial market: users trade with each other, the market determines prices, and probabilities change in real time.
Accordingly, Kalshi resembles a real-world event derivatives market, not a casino. This distinction is also a key reason it gained U.S. financial regulatory approval.
Kalshi’s importance extends beyond prediction markets alone. It is pioneering the transformation of future events into tradable financial instruments.
This opens the door to markets that no longer trade only assets themselves, but directly trade probabilities and expectations drawn from the real world.
From AI and macro finance to information markets, Prediction Markets could become a vital component of the next-generation digital economy. Kalshi represents one of the earliest regulatory experiments in this direction.
Kalshi converts real-world events into tradable probability markets using YES/NO event contracts. Users can trade on elections, economic data, crypto, sports, and more, while market prices provide a real-time read on the crowd’s collective forecast.
Unlike traditional betting platforms, Kalshi operates with an order book, market-driven pricing, and oversight from the U.S. CFTC—making it far closer to a financial exchange.
YES means the user believes the event will happen; NO means the user believes it will not.
Because contract prices always range from $0 to $1, they directly reflect the market’s estimated likelihood of an event occurring.
Kalshi uses an Order Book system where users freely place orders and the market price forms through peer-to-peer transactions.
Yes. You can close or sell your position at any time before the event settles.
Kalshi determines and settles the final outcome based on pre-defined data sources and rules.
Gambling platforms rely on house-set odds and player-versus-house bets. Kalshi uses market-based probability trading, which aligns more closely with financial market structures.





