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Sports Betting and Prediction Markets Surge: Kalshi's Billion-Dollar Rise, Esports Expansions, and Leagues' Responses
Published 2 months, 1 week ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the sports betting industry shows robust growth amid rising competition from prediction markets, key partnerships, and esports expansions. Kalshi, a leading prediction platform, reported 1.3 billion dollars in estimated annualized revenue from sports contracts, equaling about 20 percent of DraftKings projected 6.5 to 6.9 billion dollars for 2026, per Financial Times data from February 16[1][5]. This surge, with monthly users jumping 8.5 times to 5.1 million since early 2025, signals a shift as sportsbooks like DraftKings and FanDuel launch their own prediction products to retain low-margin customers[5].
Partnerships dominate headlines. On Monday, esports data firm GRID allied with prediction market Forkast, feeding real-time stats from titles like League of Legends and Valorant for seamless trading[2]. Kambi Group inked a multi-year odds feed deal with ComeOn Group, boosting esports coverage via subsidiary Abios in markets like Sweden and Ontario[4][6]. Gambling brands continue dominating Counter-Strike 2 team sponsorships, with 12 of Europes top 20 teams and nine of 10 in the Americas featuring betting logos on jerseys[3].
Leagues respond decisively. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver equated prediction markets to sportsbooks on February 16, permitting players like Giannis Antetokounmpo minuscule under-1-percent investments in Kalshi while monitoring legal clashes in states like Nevada[11][12]. Unlike the NBAs caution, the NHL embraced Polymarket and Kalshi deals last fall[8].
Consumer behavior tilts toward predictions, with PrizePicks hitting record engagement on Big Game Sunday, February 16[14]. No major regulatory shifts or disruptions emerged, but X banned paid gambling partnerships in organic posts[13]. Compared to prior weeks, prediction markets now challenge traditional books more aggressively, eroding market share as DraftKings revenue estimates hold steady despite threats[5]. Leaders adapt via integrations and sponsorships, fortifying esports and hybrid models for sustained growth. (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
Partnerships dominate headlines. On Monday, esports data firm GRID allied with prediction market Forkast, feeding real-time stats from titles like League of Legends and Valorant for seamless trading[2]. Kambi Group inked a multi-year odds feed deal with ComeOn Group, boosting esports coverage via subsidiary Abios in markets like Sweden and Ontario[4][6]. Gambling brands continue dominating Counter-Strike 2 team sponsorships, with 12 of Europes top 20 teams and nine of 10 in the Americas featuring betting logos on jerseys[3].
Leagues respond decisively. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver equated prediction markets to sportsbooks on February 16, permitting players like Giannis Antetokounmpo minuscule under-1-percent investments in Kalshi while monitoring legal clashes in states like Nevada[11][12]. Unlike the NBAs caution, the NHL embraced Polymarket and Kalshi deals last fall[8].
Consumer behavior tilts toward predictions, with PrizePicks hitting record engagement on Big Game Sunday, February 16[14]. No major regulatory shifts or disruptions emerged, but X banned paid gambling partnerships in organic posts[13]. Compared to prior weeks, prediction markets now challenge traditional books more aggressively, eroding market share as DraftKings revenue estimates hold steady despite threats[5]. Leaders adapt via integrations and sponsorships, fortifying esports and hybrid models for sustained growth. (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