Why $8.2B prediction markets’ major league sports backing is huge blow to legacy betting

Share This Post

The National Hockey League (NHL) has reached licensing agreements with prediction market platforms Kalshi and Polymarket, making it the first major US professional sports league to permit the use of its trademarks by prediction markets, or “licensed betting markets.”

As The Wall Street Journal reported on Oct. 22, the multiyear deals grant both platforms rights to use the NHL logo, terms such as “NHL” and “Stanley Cup,” and individual team names.

The intellectual property package is the same that the league extends to sportsbook operators such as DraftKings, FanDuel, and BetMGM.

The agreements formalize the push of prediction markets into sports betting, an incursion that has drawn legal challenges from state regulators and outcry from gambling-industry groups.

Kalshi and Polymarket offer event contracts on games that function similarly to traditional sports bets, but operate under the oversight of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) rather than state gaming commissions.

As a federally licensed exchange, Kalshi offers sports event contracts in all 50 states, including jurisdictions that restrict betting on standard sportsbooks. Meanwhile, Polymarket is in the late stages of a US comeback.

Keith Wachtel, president of NHL business, stated:

“Prediction markets are here to stay. Partnering with Kalshi and Polymarket could expand the league’s fan base to the tech-savvy users of prediction markets, Wachtel added, while noting that sportsbooks remain “important partners” of the NHL.”

Volume surge and market share

The partnership arrives as prediction markets record multibillion-dollar quarterly volumes. Kalshi and Polymarket are the largest platforms, accounting for 46.6% and 52.1% of the market, respectively, as of last week.

According to a Dune dashboard by user dunedata, Kalshi’s volume increased from $1.9 billion in the second quarter to $4.5 billion in the third quarter. In comparison, Polymarket’s volume rose from $3.2 billion to $3.7 billion during the same period.

Combined volumes for the previous quarter amount to $8.2 billion, representing a 61% increase over the second quarter’s results.

Kalshi has enjoyed record volumes since Sept. 29, when it launched a product similar to same-game parlays, and brokerage Robinhood Markets announced surging volumes in sports contracts.

Since that date, DraftKings shares have dropped 27%, while shares of FanDuel parent Flutter Entertainment have fallen 14%.

A parlay combines two or more wagers, such as betting on outcomes of separate games, into a single bet.

Before the NHL deal, Kalshi avoided using trademarked terms such as “NFL” or “Super Bowl” on its platform, instead referring to “Pro football champion” and identifying teams by their cities.

The NHL and other leagues have historically protected their intellectual property from unauthorized use.

The licensing agreements remove that constraint, allowing Kalshi and Polymarket to market sports contracts using official league branding.

Meanwhile, established sportsbooks have adapted accordingly. DraftKings acquired Railbird Technologies, which owns a CFTC-licensed exchange, as part of a strategy to enter prediction markets.

In August, FanDuel partnered with the CME Group, an exchange operator, to develop a trading platform similar to Kalshi’s.

Polymarket received a $2 billion investment commitment from the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange earlier this month, supporting the startup’s plans to relaunch in the US in the coming months.

Polymarket stopped serving Americans in a 2022 settlement with the CFTC but acquired a small CFTC-regulated exchange in July.

The exchange, now known as Polymarket US, plans to list contracts on sports and elections, according to regulatory filings.

The previous quarter’s growth and the recent partnership demonstrate that prediction rails have captured material market share from traditional operators, with sports IP accelerating adoption among retail users who previously accessed betting exclusively through more established names.

The post Why $8.2B prediction markets’ major league sports backing is huge blow to legacy betting appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Ethereum Shows Strength: Indicators Suggest Bigger Moves Ahead

Ethereum is gaining momentum, and several technical signals suggest that a significant move could be on the way With key support levels holding and bullish patterns forming, the market may be setting

Terra’s Fallen Empire Flickers: LUNC and LUNA Rally Into Upgrade Week

While Terraform Labs founder Do Kwon is slated for sentencing later this week and the Terra Classic v218 upgrade heads down the runway, both luna classic (LUNC) and luna (LUNA) have been enjoying a

Corporate Bitcoin portfolios are hiding a massive liability crisis that triggered an average 27% crash last month

Corporate Bitcoin holdings have been treated as a straightforward signal for years: a company buys BTC, investors read it as conviction, and the stock trades with a built-in Bitcoin premium While

Coinbase Opens 24/7 Trading for All Altcoin Monthly Futures, Perpetuals Next

Coinbase has activated 24/7 trading for all altcoin monthly futures, with perpetual-style contracts arriving soon, expanding derivative access that could boost liquidity and price discovery across a

Polish Lawmakers Fail To Override President’s Veto On Crypto Market Bill — Report

According to the latest report, the lower house of Poland’s parliament has failed to overturn the President’s veto of the Crypto-Asset Market Act Earlier this week, the Polish President, Karol

AI Smart Contract Exploits: Expert Warns Agents Could Trigger $10–20B Annual Losses in DeFi Sector

A recent study by MATS and Anthropic Fellows confirms that AI agents can profitably exploit smart contract vulnerabilities, establishing a “concrete lower bound” for economic harm Novel Exploits