Kalshi's Wild $11 Billion Ride Will Hit a Limit

Having just secured a valuation of $11 billion for his company, Kalshi co-founder Tarek Mansour is bullish. As a market leader in the booming prediction-markets industry, his platform, active in more than 140 countries, allows users to bet on events spanning culture, politics, sports, economics and more.

“ The long-term vision is to financialize everything and create a tradeable asset out of any difference in opinion,” he told delegates at Citadel Securities’ Future of Global Markets Conference in October. And “if you do build a general-purpose exchange that can resolve differences of opinions on anything,” the total addressable market is “quite massive — quite a bit bigger than the current TAM of the stock market.”

For many, a world where every disagreement becomes a bet presents a dystopian future. Even so, Kalshi is growing rapidly. Notional volume on the platform hit $5.8 billion in November. That’s more than 30 times its rate at the start of the year and five times the peak recorded during the 2024 presidential election, after a landmark ruling paved the way for it to list election wagers. And although Mansour may be way off his total addressable market target — global stock exchanges trade annual volumes of $180 trillion — his valuation is getting closer: Kalshi is already worth a fifth of Nasdaq Inc., and three-quarters of Euronext NV, the company that operates the Paris, Amsterdam, Brussels, Dublin, Oslo, Milan, Lisbon and Athens stock exchanges.

Yet his firm — and the prediction-markets industry broadly — faces challenges. First is competition. Much of Kalshi’s growth came from a distribution agreement with Robinhood Markets Inc., which integrated its service to offer events trading to its 27 million users. According to Bloomberg Intelligence, 54% of Kalshi’s recent volumes flowed via Robinhood. But now Robinhood plans to launch a rival platform in part to recapture the 50% fee share it pays to its partner. It has even incentivized one of Kalshi’s largest market makers, Susquehanna International Group, with an equity stake in the venture to come on board as a day-one liquidity provider.