Prediction Market Giants Clash as Competition Between Kalshi and Polymarket Heats Up

marsbitPublished on 2026-04-02Last updated on 2026-04-02

Abstract

The competition between US-based prediction market platforms Kalshi and Polymarket has intensified, with both companies exchanging sharp public criticisms. Kalshi, which is regulated by the CFTC, launched an ad campaign in Washington, D.C., with slogans such as "We don’t do death markets," directly targeting Polymarket’s offshore operations and its controversial contracts related to military conflicts and sensitive events. Kalshi accused Polymarket of being "irresponsible, dangerous, and non-compliant," while Polymarket responded by calling for fact-based discussions and emphasizing its commitment to market integrity. The dispute highlights fundamental differences in their regulatory approaches and comes amid growing scrutiny over insider trading and ethical concerns in the prediction market industry, which has seen combined weekly volumes nearing $6 billion.

Written by: Yash Roy, Bloomberg

Compiled by: Saoirse, Foresight News

This is an advertisement placed by the American prediction market platform Kalshi at a Washington bus stop in March. With the slogan 'We Don't Do Death Markets,' it emphasizes its own federally regulated compliance to attack its competitor Polymarket's unregulated overseas operations and sensitive contracts related to military conflicts. Photographer: Daniel Hoyle / Bloomberg

As competition in the prediction market industry intensifies and this emerging field faces strict regulatory scrutiny in Washington, Kalshi and Polymarket are exchanging heavy accusations in a fierce confrontation.

The two platforms have frequently clashed before, but recent conflicts have escalated completely — Kalshi launched a highly targeted advertising campaign, and its employees have publicly criticized Polymarket, with the rhetoric from both sides becoming increasingly heated.

Benjamin Freeman, who is responsible for political and election markets at Kalshi, posted on social media on Monday, stating: 'Polymarket's irresponsible, dangerous, and allegedly违规的行为 (non-compliant behavior) is threatening the survival of legitimate prediction markets in the United States.'

This accusation quickly sparked a fierce war of words between the two companies.

Polymarket responded in a statement: 'We welcome competition but believe discussions should be based on facts. Misleading the public only harms the entire industry and its participants.'

Kalshi spokesperson Elisabeth Diana directly retorted: 'It's laughable to hear this from a company whose vast majority of trading volume is on an unregulated overseas platform, with rules that even allow for 'death markets'.'

(Note: Death Markets is a general term in the prediction market industry for trading contracts that directly/indirectly bet on events related to death, military conflicts, assassinations, etc., also known as 'assassination markets.')

This internal strife erupts at a critical time when Polymarket and Kalshi are vying for the leading position in the rapidly growing prediction market industry. This industry provides Americans with a new way to bet on various events, from sports games to election outcomes. According to data compiled by a user on Dune Analytics, the two startups have recently set new records in weekly trading volume, with their combined nominal trading volume recently approaching $6 billion.

Prediction Market Trading Volume Reaches Billions

Weekly nominal trading volume of Polymarket and Kalshi. Note: Data is for the week ending March 9th. Source: @datadashboards on Dune Analytics

The core of the dispute lies in the fundamental differences in the establishment models and operating rules of the trading platforms. The Kalshi platform is headquartered in the United States and is regulated by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC); Polymarket's main trading platform is based overseas.

Polymarket leverages its overseas operational advantage to list contracts related to military conflicts, including those involving Iran. Kalshi directly states that such products are both unethical and illegal.

One of Kalshi's advertisements bluntly states: 'We Don't Do Death Markets.'

Earlier this week, this set of marketing ads from Kalshi, in the form of a 'platform rules list,' began appearing at bus stops and subway stations in Washington.

One of them reads: 'Rule 1: We ban insider trading because Kalshi is a federally regulated U.S. exchange.' In the eyes of industry observers, the subtext of this statement is obvious: Polymarket's main platform is not under the jurisdiction of U.S. regulators.

'BETS OFF Act' signage, Representative Greg Casar and Senator Chris Murphy speak at a press conference regarding the 'Betting on Events with Security and Federal Functions Off-Limits (BETS OFF) Act'. Photographer: Stephanie Reynolds / Bloomberg

Following allegations that insider information was used to improperly bet on U.S. military actions in Iran and Venezuela, Congress has turned its focus to the issue of insider trading in prediction markets. In response, Kalshi has taken a tougher stance, imposing fines, suspending trading, and other penalties on users it deems to have violated rules; Polymarket has been relatively permissive, though with increased regulatory attention, the platform recently announced its own insider trading rules.

Kalshi spokesperson Diana said: 'We want to make these significant differences clear. Many people in the market currently conflate Kalshi and Polymarket and confuse the different paths we have taken regarding regulatory compliance.'

In addition to its overseas main platform, Polymarket also has a U.S.-regulated platform, which is still in the testing phase. The company stated in a declaration that both platforms enforce 'the same strict market integrity standards, including prohibitions on insider trading and market manipulation, active monitoring of trading, and ongoing communication and cooperation with regulators and law enforcement agencies.'

A trade on the Polymarket website regarding whether the Houthis will attack Israeli territory. Photographer: Gabby Jones / Bloomberg

Just a few months ago, Kalshi co-founder Luana Lopes Lara was still trying to ease tensions between the two rivals. In a social media post last October, she expressed hope that the industry could move beyond 'destructive infighting' and develop together.

Now, that vision seems largely shattered.

The conflict became even more difficult to reconcile after Kalshi advisor and former U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commissioner Brian Quintenz joined the fray. In response to reports that prosecutors are investigating insider trading, Brian Quintenz publicly hinted on social media this week that the investigation should focus on Polymarket. When contacted by Bloomberg News, he declined to comment further.

Related Questions

QWhat is the main point of contention between Kalshi and Polymarket?

AThe core dispute revolves around their operational models and regulatory compliance. Kalshi, a US-based platform regulated by the CFTC, criticizes Polymarket for its primarily offshore, unregulated main platform and for offering controversial 'death market' contracts related to military conflicts.

QWhat specific advertising campaign did Kalshi launch against Polymarket?

AKalshi launched a targeted ad campaign in Washington, D.C., bus and metro stations. One ad stated, 'We don't do death markets,' emphasizing its federal regulation and taking a direct shot at Polymarket's offshore operations and sensitive contracts.

QHow did Polymarket respond to the allegations from Kalshi?

APolymarket responded with a statement saying, 'We welcome competition, but believe discussions should be based on facts,' and argued that misleading the public harms the entire industry and its participants. They also stated that both their offshore and US-regulated platforms maintain the same strict market integrity standards.

QWhat recent legislative focus is mentioned in the article that impacts prediction markets?

AThe article mentions that Congress has turned its focus to the issue of insider trading in prediction markets, particularly following allegations that people used inside information to bet on U.S. military actions in Iran and Venezuela. This has led to the proposed 'BETS OFF Act'.

QWhat was the reported combined recent trading volume for Kalshi and Polymarket?

AAccording to user-compiled data on Dune Analytics, the two startups recently set new weekly trading volume records, with their combined nominal trading volume approaching $6 billion.

Related Reads

The Largest IPO in History Is Approaching, Surpassing SpaceX, 28 Years of AI Self-Iteration, Countdown to Intelligence Explosion

"Anthropic Nears Trillion-Dollar IPO, Fueled by Explosive Growth and 2028 'Intelligence Explosion' Warning Anthropic is considering a deal valuing the AI company near $1 trillion, potentially leading to one of the largest IPOs ever and surpassing SpaceX. Its revenue has skyrocketed, with Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) reaching $45 billion in May 2026—a 500% increase in just five months. This vertical growth curve is attributed to its key products, Claude Code and Cowork, dominating AI coding and enterprise collaboration. Beyond commercial success, co-founder Jack Clark issued a pivotal warning in an interview: there is a greater than 50% chance that by the end of 2028, AI systems will achieve recursive self-improvement—the ability to autonomously build a 'better version' of themselves, initiating an 'intelligence explosion.' This prophecy underpins the company's astronomical valuation, as the market prices in the potential for transformative and disruptive AI. Further signaling its ambition, Anthropic formed a $1.5 billion joint venture with Goldman Sachs and Blackstone, aiming to disrupt traditional consulting firms like McKinsey by deploying Claude AI for complex strategic work. This move tests AI's capacity to replace high-level cognitive labor, a precursor to its predicted autonomous evolution. The narrative presents a dual future: unprecedented economic opportunity alongside significant risks like economic restructuring and security threats. Anthropic's meteoric rise and Clark's 2028 prediction frame the coming years as a countdown to a potential technological singularity."

marsbit5m ago

The Largest IPO in History Is Approaching, Surpassing SpaceX, 28 Years of AI Self-Iteration, Countdown to Intelligence Explosion

marsbit5m ago

Has Hook Summer Really Arrived? sato, Lo0p, FLOOD Ignite the New Narrative of Uniswap v4

"Hook Summer" Arrives? Sato, Lo0p, FLOOD Ignite Uniswap v4 Narrative Amidst a slight market recovery, attention within the Ethereum ecosystem has shifted to Meme coins built on Uniswap v4's Hook protocol. Following ASTEROID, tokens like sato, sat1, Lo0p, and FLOOD have become market focal points, with market caps ranging from millions to tens of millions, bringing concentrated liquidity to a narrative-dry market. Uniswap v4 Hooks are "plugin smart contracts" that allow developers to inject custom logic at key points in a liquidity pool's lifecycle (initialization, adding/removing liquidity, swaps, etc.), making the AMM programmable. Recent representative projects include: * **sato**: Market cap peaked over $38M; uses a v4 curve mechanism for minting/burning, locking ETH as reserve. * **sat1**: Market cap briefly exceeded $10M, positioning as an "optimized sato," but later declined significantly. * **Lo0p**: Market cap neared $6.6M; a "lending AMM protocol" allowing users to borrow ETH against deposited LO0P tokens without immediate selling pressure. * **FLOOD**: Market cap approached $6M; channels trading reserves into Aave v3 to generate yield, which is retained in the pool. The emergence of these Hook-based tokens could drive long-term growth for the Uniswap ecosystem by attracting users and liquidity to v4 pools. Combined with Uniswap's activated fee switch (partially used to burn UNI), the long-term outlook for UNI appears positive. However, short-term UNI price appreciation is not directly guaranteed. Factors include the sustainability and lifecycle of these new tokens, their price volatility, overall market conditions, and regulatory pressures. Currently, Uniswap v4's TVL ($595M) lags behind v3 and v2, indicating Hook adoption still requires time to mature. In summary, the Hook ecosystem serves as "long-term nourishment" for UNI, but acts more as a "catalyst" than a direct "booster" in the short term. Note: These are early-stage experimental tokens and may carry unknown risks.

marsbit30m ago

Has Hook Summer Really Arrived? sato, Lo0p, FLOOD Ignite the New Narrative of Uniswap v4

marsbit30m ago

Has Hook Summer Truly Arrived? sato, Lo0p, FLOOD Ignite the New Uniswap v4 Narrative

With the broader market showing signs of recovery, a new wave of interest has emerged around Ethereum-based meme coins. Following ASTEROID, tokens like sato, sat1, Lo0p, and FLOOD, built upon the Uniswap v4 Hook protocol, are capturing market attention. Their market capitalizations range from millions to tens of millions of dollars, injecting much-needed focused liquidity into a market lacking narratives. This article explores whether this trend signifies an incoming "Hook Summer" and its potential impact on UNI's price. Hooks are essentially plug-in smart contracts for Uniswap v4 liquidity pools, allowing developers to inject custom logic at key points in a pool's lifecycle (like initialization, adding/removing liquidity, swaps). This transforms the AMM into programmable building blocks. Key highlighted projects include: * **sato**: Peaked over $38M market cap. It utilizes a v4 curve for minting/burning; buying locks ETH as reserve to mint new tokens, while selling redeems ETH from the reserve and burns tokens. * **sat1**: Market cap briefly exceeded $10M, promoted as an "optimized sato," but later declined significantly. * **Lo0p**: Reached nearly $6.6M. It's a lending AMM protocol where buying LO0P tokens locks them as collateral, allowing users to borrow ETH from the pool reserve at 40% LTV, aiming to improve capital efficiency for idle ETH in LPs. * **FLOOD**: Peaked near $6M. Its mechanism directs asset reserves from buys into Aave v3 to generate yield, with fees and interest retained in the pool to potentially influence the token's price long-term. In the long term, the development of the Hook ecosystem can attract users and liquidity to Uniswap v4, benefiting UNI's fundamentals—especially combined with the recent activation of the protocol fee switch, where a portion of fees is used to burn UNI. However, in the short term, these Hook-based tokens are unlikely to directly drive significant UNI price appreciation. Their impact is moderated by factors like token sustainability, price volatility, and broader market and regulatory conditions. Currently, Uniswap v4's TVL ($595M) still trails behind v2 and v3, indicating adoption and growth will take time. The article concludes that while the Hook ecosystem provides long-term "nourishment" for UNI, its short-term role is more of a "catalyst" than a "booster." Readers are cautioned that these are early-stage experimental tokens and may carry unknown risks.

Odaily星球日报43m ago

Has Hook Summer Truly Arrived? sato, Lo0p, FLOOD Ignite the New Uniswap v4 Narrative

Odaily星球日报43m ago

Trading

Spot
Futures
活动图片