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Sports Betting Trends: Prediction Markets Surge, Sportsbooks Adapt to Competition
Published 3 months, 4 weeks ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the sports betting industry shows steady activity amid a maturing market, with no major disruptions but notable promotions and emerging competition. Kalshi, a prediction market platform, hit a record $1.7 billion in trading volume over the busy Christmas period, signaling strong consumer interest in alternative betting formats despite traditional sportsbooks dominating[2]. This contrasts with slowed legalization, as 2025 marked the first year since 2017 with no new U.S. states approving sports betting, following Missouri's launch 18 months ago; only 40 states now offer it[2].
Recent NBA and NFL games drove action: On December 28, betting odds favored the Celtics by 6.5 points over the Trail Blazers (moneyline -255/+220, total 232.5), while Thunder were heavy -14.5 favorites against the 76ers (+640/-800)[1][5]. Trail Blazers upset Celtics 114-108, with Day'Ron Sharpe scoring 26[11]. Packers-Rams NFL lines shifted from -130/+110 opens to tighter spreads across Bet365, FanDuel, and others[7].
Promotions surged, like bet365's $150 bonus bets via code GOALBET for NFL/NBA bets starting December 28, and a safety net up to $1,000[3]. theScore Bet, rebranded from ESPN BET on December 1, launched as the newest U.S. app in 21 states with a "Bet $10 Get $100 If Win" offer, earning 4.7/5 Apple and 4.2/5 Android ratings from its Canadian roots[6].
Leaders respond to challenges like scandals and prediction market rivalry by enhancing payments; a new Digital Payments Report 2025 stresses seamless transactions to cut abandonment, using AI for fraud and efficiency[4]. Consumer behavior tilts toward bonuses and props, with experts eyeing tax perks on prediction markets over sportsbook wins[2]. Compared to early December's hold rates at 10.2% in New York through December 21, volume remains robust, projecting $25 billion revenue and $300 billion wagered for 2025[2][8]. No supply chain or price shifts noted, but sweeps casinos face pushback in key markets[2]. (298 words)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Recent NBA and NFL games drove action: On December 28, betting odds favored the Celtics by 6.5 points over the Trail Blazers (moneyline -255/+220, total 232.5), while Thunder were heavy -14.5 favorites against the 76ers (+640/-800)[1][5]. Trail Blazers upset Celtics 114-108, with Day'Ron Sharpe scoring 26[11]. Packers-Rams NFL lines shifted from -130/+110 opens to tighter spreads across Bet365, FanDuel, and others[7].
Promotions surged, like bet365's $150 bonus bets via code GOALBET for NFL/NBA bets starting December 28, and a safety net up to $1,000[3]. theScore Bet, rebranded from ESPN BET on December 1, launched as the newest U.S. app in 21 states with a "Bet $10 Get $100 If Win" offer, earning 4.7/5 Apple and 4.2/5 Android ratings from its Canadian roots[6].
Leaders respond to challenges like scandals and prediction market rivalry by enhancing payments; a new Digital Payments Report 2025 stresses seamless transactions to cut abandonment, using AI for fraud and efficiency[4]. Consumer behavior tilts toward bonuses and props, with experts eyeing tax perks on prediction markets over sportsbook wins[2]. Compared to early December's hold rates at 10.2% in New York through December 21, volume remains robust, projecting $25 billion revenue and $300 billion wagered for 2025[2][8]. No supply chain or price shifts noted, but sweeps casinos face pushback in key markets[2]. (298 words)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI