Key Highlights
Contents
- Kalshi pursues funding at $20 billion valuation, representing a tenfold increase from its June 2025 assessment of $2 billion
- Female participation has doubled to 26% of total users over the past ten months, up from 13%
- The company is diversifying from sports betting into political, economic, and entertainment prediction markets
- Sports betting continues to dominate with approximately 65% of total trading volume in 2026
- Legal challenges from regulators and congressional lawmakers threaten certain market offerings
The U.S.-based prediction market operator Kalshi is currently negotiating funding rounds that would value the company at approximately $20 billion. This represents a dramatic escalation from its $2 billion valuation just nine months earlier in June 2025 and the $11 billion assessment it achieved by December 2025.
The platform’s financial performance has crossed the $1 billion threshold in annualized revenue. According to sources speaking with the Wall Street Journal, internal figures suggest the actual run rate may be approaching $1.5 billion.
Sports wagering remains the primary driver of platform activity, accounting for roughly 65% of all trading volume through the first months of 2026. However, Kalshi is actively working to diversify this concentration.
The company has been aggressively launching markets in political forecasting, economic indicators, and entertainment categories. Platform participants can now place trades on everything from Academy Awards winners and Taylor Swift’s career moves to electoral contests and macroeconomic releases.
A central component of Kalshi’s expansion strategy involves attracting demographic segments that conventional sports betting operators failed to capture. This particularly includes female users and younger participants more engaged with entertainment and digital culture.
Female traders now constitute 26% of Kalshi’s total user population. This represents a doubling from the 13% recorded just ten months prior.
The company employs female content creators to share their trading activity across social platforms. Kalshi also features young women prominently in marketing campaigns and organizes entertainment-focused events.
According to Kalshi co-founder Luana Lopes Lara, the company’s long-term objective is achieving a user demographic profile that mirrors the broader U.S. population within the next ten years.
The Gender Gap in Traditional Sports Wagering
Conventional sports betting platforms were designed with a narrow user profile in mind — individuals deeply engaged with sports, who monitor player injuries, and comprehend betting odds. Marketing efforts were exclusively targeted at this demographic.
Studies indicate women have traditionally shown stronger preference for chance-oriented products like slots and lottery offerings. Male users historically favored sports wagering and skill-dependent formats.
Prediction markets occupy a middle ground between these categories. They offer returns based on both subject matter expertise and gut instinct, which may account for their growing appeal among female users in ways traditional sportsbooks never achieved.
Current data suggests approximately 20% of women between 18 and 49 years old maintain active sports betting accounts. Simultaneously, documented cases of gambling-related problems among women have been increasing.
Legal Challenges and Public Criticism
Kalshi is confronting legal action from state-level regulators who contend that its sports-related markets constitute violations of gambling statutes. Legislative proposals have emerged at both federal and state levels seeking to restrict the types of markets the platform can operate.
The platform has attracted criticism following questionable trading patterns related to a possible U.S. military action against Iran and markets concerning the potential removal of Iran’s Supreme Leader.
Additionally, Super Bowl-related trades were connected to a fraternity organization with links to Jeff Bezos’ stepson. Fraternity members reportedly placed positions after non-public information about Bezos’ intentions circulated through the group’s private channels.
A separate incident involving false rumors that actor Mark Wahlberg would appear at the game generated over $24 million in trading activity before the information was debunked.
Competing platform Polymarket is also said to be considering its own capital raising efforts, though the service remains mostly inaccessible to U.S.-based traders.
