Kalshi’s partnership with Tradeweb marks one of the clearest signals yet that prediction markets are moving beyond crypto experimentation.
On X, Kalshi co-founder and CEO Tarek Mansour said the deal was an acceleration point: “Kalshi and Tradeweb are partnering to accelerate institutional adoption in prediction markets.” He added that while it took roughly a decade for institutions to meaningfully engage with crypto, “that number is ~5 years for prediction markets.”
That timeline may prove optimistic. But the direction of travel is unmistakable.
From niche hedges to institutional rails
Tradeweb is a fixed-income and derivatives platform used by more than 3,000 institutions, including asset managers, banks, hedge funds, governments, and central banks, facilitating over $2.6 trillion in notional volume per day.
Kalshi’s plan is in two stages. First, its probability data will be integrated directly into Tradeweb’s rates and credit platform. It will be bundled into macro-intelligence datasets that institutional desks already use for modelling. Second, Tradeweb will build trading functionality powered by Kalshi Markets. This will enable clients to add event contracts alongside government bonds, swaps, credit products, and ETFs within the same portfolio interface.
Kalshi and Tradeweb are partnering to accelerate institutional adoption in prediction markets.
It took ~10 years for institutions to jump into crypto. That number is ~5 years for prediction markets.
The strategic logic is straightforward. Institutions already hedge macro risks, recessions, elections, rate decisions, and geopolitical shocks, but they do so indirectly. As Mansour pointed out, Wall Street desks in 2016 shorted the S&P 500 as a proxy for a Trump victory, only to lose money when equities rallied despite the election outcome. Prediction markets, in theory, offer a cleaner instrument: direct exposure to the event itself rather than an imperfect asset proxy.
A broader institutional adoption
The Tradeweb partnership is not occurring in isolation. Over the past year, capital and infrastructure have been steadily aligning around prediction markets.
Jump Trading, one of the most active proprietary firms in crypto and derivatives, is reportedly taking equity stakes in both Kalshi and Polymarket in exchange for providing liquidity. According to Bloomberg, Jump has expanded into prediction-market trading, hiring roughly 20 staff for the business.
Meanwhile, Coinbase has moved to fold prediction markets into its “Everything Exchange” strategy. It recently entered an agreement to acquire The Clearing Company, a startup focused on regulated event markets, to accelerate the build-out of its prediction offering. Coinbase users can now trade event contracts alongside crypto, equities, and derivatives.
These developments matter because institutional adoption is about integration into risk systems, compliance frameworks, and portfolio construction models.
What this means for market structure
If Kalshi’s data becomes embedded in Tradeweb’s macro dashboards, the first-order impact may be informational. Institutional desks could begin using event-market probabilities to adjust duration exposure, hedge currency risk, or calibrate credit spreads. In this phase, prediction markets function as signal providers.
The second phase, enabling direct trading of event contracts inside Tradeweb, is more structurally disruptive. It would give traditional fixed-income desks tools to hedge binary risks like government shutdowns, tariff announcements, or central bank policy decisions without constructing synthetic positions through Treasuries, futures, or options.
The implications are twofold.
First, liquidity quality should improve. Institutional participation typically compresses spreads and increases depth. Kalshi has already demonstrated that onboarding a major market maker can materially tighten books. Expanding access through Tradeweb could replicate that dynamic at scale.
Second, regulatory scrutiny will increase. The more prediction markets resemble formal risk-transfer venues used by banks and asset managers, the more they move from the fringes of event betting into the regulated derivatives ecosystem.
What’s next?
The key variable is whether institutions treat prediction markets as tactical curiosities or strategic risk tools.
If adoption stalls at the data layer, prediction markets may simply become another macro sentiment gauge, useful, but peripheral. If, however, event contracts begin appearing in portfolio hedging mandates and risk committees, the category could change into a distinct asset class.
Either way, the institutional clock is ticking, and it appears to be moving faster than it did for crypto.
