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#预测市场交易量创历史新高 The World Cup ignited a nearly $200 billion new market, with prediction market trading volume hitting a record high!
The World Cup ignited a nearly $200 billion new market, with prediction market trading volume hitting a record high!
The World Cup ignited a nearly $200 billion new market! From betting on matches to a "prediction economy," a capital carnival is quietly unfolding!
While fans worldwide focus on who will lift the World Cup trophy, another group in Wall Street, Silicon Valley, and the crypto circle is paying attention to a different set of numbers. These numbers are even more astonishing than the score changes on the World Cup field. Leveraging the heat of the USA-Mexico-Canada World Cup, the leading prediction market platform saw its notional trading volume hit an all-time high.
Over the past few weeks, the trading volume of a prediction market platform has continuously broken historical records, with weekly trading volume exceeding $3.7 billion. Based on a simple annualized calculation at the current level, its annualized notional trading volume is approaching the $200 billion mark. Compared to last year's total trading volume of about $20 billion, the growth rate is as high as 862%. The biggest catalyst for this explosive growth is not AI, nor the crypto bull market, but the World Cup.
For many ordinary investors, the prediction market is still an unfamiliar concept. But in the eyes of more and more investment institutions, it is evolving from a niche experiment into the next-generation information trading platform, and is even seen as having the potential to reshape the gambling, finance, and information pricing markets. The World Cup has become the perfect stage for it to truly enter the public eye.
A once niche track suddenly hits the spotlight
In the past few years, prediction markets have been active in the crypto community and political analysis circles. Initially, users primarily engaged in predictive trading around major events like the U.S. presidential election, Federal Reserve interest rate hikes, and war conflicts.
For example: Will Trump be elected? Will the Fed cut rates? Will a certain bill pass Congress? These questions are broken down into probability markets. Participants express their judgments by buying and selling contracts. Market prices reflect collective expectations in real time. Due to relatively high participation barriers, this model has long remained among a small group of investors and professional players.
Until the World Cup arrived.
Why is the World Cup naturally suited for prediction markets? Comparing the World Cup to all sports events, it almost meets all the ideal conditions for a prediction market.
First, the schedule is dense enough. From group stage to knockout rounds, there are plenty of matches almost every day. Second, information updates extremely quickly. Player injuries, starting lineups, yellow and red cards, weather changes, pre-match press conferences—every piece of news can affect the match outcome. More importantly, the results are clear and immediate.
When the match ends, the winner and loser are immediately revealed. The market can settle quickly and swiftly move to the next round of trading.
For prediction market platforms, this means user participation frequency will be much higher than in traditional political prediction markets. For users, the World Cup provides a natural training ground because everyone can form their own judgment about match outcomes.
From "match betting" to "trading probabilities," the rules of the game are changing
Many people, when first encountering prediction markets, often confuse them with traditional gambling. But in reality, there is an essential difference.
The core logic of traditional gambling is placing bets. Users can only choose to bet on outcomes. Odds are set by the house.
In contrast, a prediction market is closer to a real-time trading market. There is no traditional house. The market price itself represents probability. If a team's championship probability is priced at 70% by the market, the corresponding contract price is approximately $0.70.
As the match progresses and information changes, this price fluctuates constantly. Users can not only buy before the match but also adjust their positions during the match. A red card, a goal, or an injury to a key player can cause the price to change dramatically in an instant. This makes prediction markets more like stock markets than traditional gambling.
Investors trade not the outcome itself, but the probability of the outcome occurring. The World Cup brings not just trading volume data. Driven by the World Cup's momentum, the leading prediction market platform's recent weekly notional trading volume has reached about $3.7 billion, a significant increase from around $2 billion in early May this year.
More importantly, this growth does not come from existing users but from a massive influx of new users.
These include: sports enthusiasts, football betting players
Social media users
Traditional investors
Ordinary non-crypto users
For the platform, this is more important than the trading volume itself. Because the World Cup has actually accomplished a task that has been difficult to achieve over the past few years: user education. In the past, explaining prediction markets to ordinary people was often very difficult. But the World Cup makes it simple because everyone naturally understands the probability of match outcomes. When users first observe match trends through market prices, they actually grasp the core product logic of prediction markets. This is why many industry insiders believe the World Cup could be the turning point for prediction markets to truly "break out."
Bigger ambition: Prediction markets aim for more than just sports
In fact, in the eyes of prediction market supporters, sports events are just the beginning. What they truly value is that in the future, all information can be priced. Who will win the World Cup? Who will be the U.S. president? When will the next interest rate cut occur? Will a listed company's earnings exceed expectations? When will AI achieve AGI? All these questions can be turned into probability markets, with market prices becoming a real-time updated "collective intelligence."
Supporters believe that the greatest value of prediction markets is not gambling but price discovery. Because when participants need to express their views with real money, they are often more honest than slogans on social media. For this reason, more and more economists and investment institutions are paying attention to this track. But behind the carnival, risks also exist.
Of course, the explosive growth brought by the World Cup does not necessarily mean prediction markets are already on solid ground.
First, the World Cup itself has a clear event-driven nature. After the event ends, whether users will stay on the platform is a huge challenge. Historically, many internet products have leveraged large events to gain traffic peaks, but few have successfully converted short-term traffic into long-term users.
Second, regulatory issues remain unresolved. As the prediction market scale continues to grow, U.S. regulators are increasingly scrutinizing its gambling nature. Is it a financial product or a gambling product? This debate still lacks a unified answer. Regulatory attitudes are likely to determine the future development space of the entire industry.
A new era of "prediction economy" is taking shape
If we take a longer view, the World Cup might just be the beginning. It has made more people realize for the first time that probabilities can be traded, that opinions can form markets, and that the future itself can become an asset. From a weekly trading volume of $3.7 billion to an annualized trading volume approaching $200 billion, the frenzy ignited by the World Cup has far exceeded the sports event itself. Behind it lies a larger trend: people are shifting from consuming information to trading information. Prediction markets are trying to become the infrastructure of this "Prediction Economy." As for whether it will eventually grow into the next global financial market or become just another short-lived traffic carnival, the answer may have to wait until after the World Cup ends, when the market itself provides it.
The World Cup has ignited a new market worth nearly $200 billion, with prediction market trading volume hitting record highs!
The World Cup has ignited a new market worth nearly $200 billion! From sports betting to the "prediction economy," a capital frenzy is quietly unfolding!
While football fans around the world are focused on who will lift the World Cup trophy, another group in Wall Street, Silicon Valley, and the crypto circle is watching a different set of numbers. These numbers are even more astonishing than the score changes on the World Cup field. Riding the wave of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada World Cup frenzy, the leading prediction market platform has seen its nominal trading volume hit an all-time high.
In recent weeks, a prediction market platform's trading volume has continuously broken historical records, with a single-week volume surpassing $3.7 billion. Based on current levels for simple annualization, its annualized nominal trading volume is approaching the $200 billion mark. Compared to last year's total trading volume of about $20 billion, the growth rate is an astounding 862%. The biggest catalyst driving this explosive growth is not AI, nor the cryptocurrency bull market. It is the World Cup.
For many ordinary investors, the concept of a prediction market remains unfamiliar. But in the eyes of a growing number of investment institutions, it is gradually evolving from a niche experiment into the next-generation information trading platform, even seen as having the potential to reshape the gambling, finance, and information pricing markets. The World Cup has precisely become the best stage for it to truly enter the public eye.
A once-niche track suddenly takes off
Over the past few years, prediction markets have been active mainly within the crypto community and political analysis circles. Early on, users primarily engaged in prediction trading around major events such as the U.S. presidential election, Fed interest rate hikes, and war conflicts.
For example: Will Trump be elected? Will the Fed cut rates? Will a certain bill pass Congress? These questions are broken down into probability markets. Participants express their judgments by buying and selling contracts. Market prices reflect collective expectations in real time. Due to relatively high participation barriers, this model remained among a small group of investors and professional players for a long time.
Until the World Cup arrived.
Why is the World Cup naturally suited for prediction markets? When comparing the World Cup to all other sports events, it possesses almost all the ideal conditions for a prediction market.
First, the schedule is dense. From group stage to knockout rounds, there are almost daily matches. Second, information updates are extremely fast. Player injuries, starting lineups, red and yellow cards, weather changes, pre-match press conferences—every piece of news can affect the match outcome. More critically, the results are clear and immediate.
Once the match ends, the win or loss is instantly revealed. The market can settle quickly and move on to the next round of trading.
For prediction market platforms, this means user engagement frequency will be far higher than in traditional political prediction markets. For users, the World Cup provides a natural training ground because everyone can form their own judgment on match outcomes.
From "sports betting" to "trading probabilities," the rules of the game are changing
When many people first encounter prediction markets, they often confuse them with traditional gambling. However, there is a fundamental difference between the two.
The core logic of traditional gambling is placing bets. Users can only choose to bet on outcomes. Odds are set by the house.
In contrast, a prediction market is more like a real-time trading market. There is no traditional house here. The market price itself represents probability. If a team's championship probability is priced at 70% by the market, the corresponding contract price is approximately $0.70.
As the match progresses and information changes, this price fluctuates constantly. Users can not only buy before the match but also adjust their positions during the game. A red card, a goal, a key player's injury—any of these can cause dramatic price swings in an instant. This makes prediction markets more akin to stock markets than traditional gambling.
Investors trade not the outcome itself, but the probability of the outcome.
What the World Cup brings is not just trading volume
Data shows that driven by the World Cup frenzy, the leading prediction market platform's weekly nominal trading volume has recently reached approximately $3.7 billion, a significant increase from about $2 billion in early May this year.
More importantly, this growth does not come from existing users but from the influx of a large number of new users.
These include:
- Sports enthusiasts
- Football match prediction players
- Social media users
- Traditional investors
- Non-crypto ordinary users
For the platform, this is even more important than the trading volume itself. Because the World Cup has actually accomplished a task that has been difficult to achieve in recent years: user education. In the past, explaining prediction markets to ordinary people was often very difficult. But the World Cup makes it simple. Because everyone naturally understands match win/loss probabilities. When users first observe match trends through market prices, they have effectively understood the core product logic of prediction markets. This is why many industry insiders believe the World Cup may become the true turning point for prediction markets to "break out."
Greater ambitions: Prediction markets aim for more than just sports
In fact, in the eyes of prediction market supporters, sports events are just the beginning. What they truly value is that all information in the future can be priced. Who will win the World Cup? Who will be the U.S. president? When will the next rate cut happen? Will a listed company's earnings beat expectations? When will AI achieve AGI? These questions can all be transformed into probability markets. Market prices then become a real-time updated "collective intelligence."
Supporters believe that the greatest value of prediction markets is not gambling. It is price discovery. Because when participants need to express opinions with real money, they tend to be more honest than slogans on social media. For this reason, more and more economists and investment institutions are paying attention to this track.
But risks also exist amidst the frenzy
Of course, the explosive growth brought by the World Cup does not necessarily mean that prediction markets have already secured a sure win.
First, the World Cup itself is clearly event-driven. After the tournament ends, whether users will stay on the platform is a huge test. Historically, many internet products have gained traffic peaks from major events, but few have successfully converted short-term traffic into long-term users.
Second, regulatory issues remain unresolved. As the prediction market continues to expand, U.S. regulators are intensifying their scrutiny of its gambling nature. Is it a financial product or a gambling product? This debate has yet to reach a unified answer. And the regulatory stance will likely determine the future development space of the entire industry.
A new era of "prediction economy" is taking shape
If we zoom out, the World Cup might just be the beginning. It makes more people realize for the first time: probabilities can be traded. Opinions can form markets. The future itself can become an asset. From a weekly trading volume of $3.7 billion to an annualized trading scale approaching $200 billion, this frenzy ignited by the World Cup has far exceeded sports events themselves. Underneath, it reflects a larger trend: people are shifting from consuming information to trading information. And prediction markets are attempting to become the infrastructure for this "prediction economy." Whether it will eventually grow into the next global financial market or remain another short-lived traffic frenzy, the answer may come from the market itself after the World Cup ends.