Kalshi claims $5b valuation as betting on reality booms

Kalshi now commands a $5 billion price tag after a $300 million fundraise, cementing its status as the breakout leader in the red-hot prediction market space and validating a new paradigm for speculative assets.
- Kalshi secured $300 million in fresh funding at a $5 billion valuation, doubling its worth since June.
- The platform now leads global prediction markets with over 60% share and $50 billion in annualized trading volume.
- Expansion into 140 countries positions Kalshi as a global force amid growing interest in real-world betting.
On Oct. 10, The New York Times reported that Kalshi, the New York–based prediction market exchange, had raised more than $300 million in new financing, pushing its valuation to $5 billion.
The round, led by Sequoia Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, a16z, Paradigm, and others after negotiations in August, doubled Kalshi’s valuation since its last round in June and marks its fastest leap in market worth since it launched in 2018.
Per the report, Kalshi plans to expand access to its event-trading platform into more than 140 countries, a move that would transform it from a U.S.-only exchange into a global player at a time when interest in betting on real-world outcomes is soaring.
Kalshi’s rise and the new frontier for market speculation
According to Dune Analytics, Kalshi overtook rival Polymarket last month to become the world’s largest prediction market by trading activity, now commanding more than 60% of global volume. The surge comes after Kalshi introduced parlay-style contracts that have drawn a wave of users and rattled established sportsbooks.
Shares of DraftKings and Flutter Entertainment, the parent company of FanDuel, have fallen sharply in recent weeks as Kalshi’s volumes climbed. The New York-based platform also engineered a frictionless on-ramp by integrating its event contracts directly into retail brokerages like Robinhood and Webull, allowing users to speculate on real-world outcomes as easily as they trade stocks.
According to The New York Times, thanks to this traction, Kalshi is now on track to clear $50 billion in annualized trading volume, up from just $300 million last year.
Meanwhile, Kalshi’s landmark fundraise arrived in a week of intense sector validation. Just days before Kalshi’s announcement, its chief rival, Polymarket, revealed that the Intercontinental Exchange, the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, would invest up to $2 billion into its platform.
As crypto.news reported, the deal valued Polymarket a staggering $8 billion prior to the investment. While Kalshi is leveraging retail accessibility and global expansion, Polymarket’s pact with ICE focuses on institutionalizing its data, granting the exchange exclusive rights to distribute the platform’s crowd-sourced probability data to hedge funds and asset managers.
A meteoric rise after regulatory challenges
The parallel rise of Kalshi and Polymarket is deeply rooted in the high-stakes arena of U.S. politics. Both platforms saw trading activity and public profiles surge during the previous election cycle, where their markets often acted as leading indicators for political outcomes.
This very prominence, however, invited intense regulatory scrutiny. Their paths to this moment were paved with legal challenges that have only recently subsided. In a significant regulatory retreat, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission dropped its legal challenge against Kalshi’s election betting business in May.
For Polymarket, a more dramatic confrontation concluded on July 15, when the Justice Department and the CFTC closed their investigations without filing charges, just months after an FBI raid on the home of its CEO.