Traditional Gambling Companies Enter Prediction Markets, Aiming for a 'Dimensionality Reduction Strike' Against Wall Street Traders

比推Опубліковано о 2026-02-12Востаннє оновлено о 2026-02-12

Анотація

Traditional sports betting giants DraftKings, Fanatics, and FanDuel are entering the prediction market space, leveraging their expertise in odds-making to compete with Wall Street trading companies. These firms are establishing or planning associated market-making entities to provide liquidity and set odds on prediction platforms, viewing their experience in pricing complex, interconnected outcomes as a key advantage. On the other side, Wall Street firms like Susquehanna and Jump Trading are expanding into sports prediction markets, though they face challenges due to limited experience in sports event pricing. Sports betting involves dynamic risk factors such as injuries or weather changes, requiring sophisticated models and data analysis—areas where traditional bookmakers excel. However, Wall Street firms are actively hiring sports specialists to bridge this gap. Competition is intensifying as both sides vie for market share, which may compress profit margins due to narrower spreads. Despite this, betting companies remain confident in their ability to succeed, citing their deep industry knowledge. Over time, the competitive strengths of both groups may converge as talent and strategies blend.

Author: Sportico

Compiled by: Azuma

Original title: Traditional Gambling Giants Enter Prediction Markets, Aiming to Outmaneuver Wall Street


With the explosion of prediction markets, two groups are closely watching—one from Wall Street and the other from Morton Street (the headquarters of gambling company Fanatics). On one side are professional financial trading firms, and on the other are traditional gambling service providers. Both believe they have what it takes to become top predators.

Gambling Companies Enter Market Making

Three traditional sports gambling service providers—DraftKings, Fanatics, and FanDuel—have all ventured into prediction markets to counter the threat this emerging trend poses to their core businesses. After experiencing a shift in investor sentiment, these companies are accelerating their efforts and view their extensive experience in the gambling industry as a potential competitive advantage.

DraftKings, Fanatics, and FanDuel have all started or plan to offer "odds" through affiliated market makers on their prediction market platforms. This is similar to their traditional sports gambling operations, but the key difference is that in prediction markets, they must compete with third parties who can also place orders.

Based on discussions between Sportico and executives from relevant companies as well as industry analysts, there is no consensus that gambling companies directly engaging in market making can achieve higher returns than professional financial trading firms. However, gambling companies remain confident in the profit potential of market making.

Peter Jackson, CEO of FanDuel’s parent company Flutter Entertainment, stated during the Q3 earnings call in November: "The core capability required for market makers is the ability to accurately price complex and interconnected outcomes. This is exactly what our core business does every day."

Fanatics already has an active affiliated market maker named Morton St. Market Maker LLC—a nod to its parent company’s office location on Morton Street in New York City, within walking distance of some of its Wall Street competitors. Morton St. Market Maker provides odds for both buying and selling contracts on Crypto.com, the underlying prediction market platform integrated by Fanatics.

Meanwhile, DraftKings and FanDuel have both hinted at the existence of affiliated market-making teams that trade against their clients. However, it remains unclear whether DraftKings or FanDuel have formally established such entities.

To ensure all users can quickly enter and exit positions at near-fair prices, market makers typically need to provide liquidity on both the "YES" and "NO" sides during specific periods. Their profits come from the small spread between the "buy now" and "sell now" quotes. For example, if a user buys a contract for the New York Mets to win at $0.50, and the market maker previously acquired the contract at $0.47 through a limit order, the market maker earns $0.03.

Wall Street’s Counter-Encirclement

On the other side of the gambling companies are professional trading institutions from Wall Street.

Although Wall Street firms like Susquehanna International Group have extensive experience in financial derivatives market making, some industry insiders interviewed by Sportico noted that Wall Street is indeed less adept at setting odds for sports events compared to traditional gambling companies.

Alfonso Straffon, who has worked in market making for both Wall Street junk bonds and sports gambling, said: "I would caution Wall Street firms not to underestimate their opponents. The sports gambling ecosystem has been around for a long time."

Sports events present more complex risk management challenges for market makers, especially during games, where any development—such as injuries, weather changes, or coaching decisions—can drastically alter the true value of bets. "Parlays" introduce additional risks, and a single mistake can lead to significant losses. If exchanges support leveraged trading, these risks will be further amplified.

Advanced data models and the ability to access information before the public—both strengths of traditional gambling companies—are crucial for mitigating risks.

However, this does not mean gambling companies are guaranteed to win in prediction markets. Another founder of a sports gambling company tends to believe that, with deeper capital and experience adapting to different financial markets, Wall Street will ultimately achieve higher returns.

Wall Street firms like Susquehanna and Jump Trading, which lack long-term sports experience, are racing to hire market makers specializing in sports. Prediction markets such as Crypto.com and Polymarket have also posted related job listings for their affiliated trading departments in recent months. Rothera, owned by Robinhood, mentioned an active affiliated market maker in its rulebook (sources suggest it may be Susquehanna). According to a Bloomberg report this week, Jump Trading is simultaneously investing in Kalshi and Polymarket.

Sportico previously reported details about Kalshi Trading (Kalshi’s affiliated market-making arm), which is also working to弥补 its lack of sports experience. Kalshi co-founder Luana Lopes Lara stated on X that Kalshi Trading was not profitable in sports业务, with sports accounting for "less than 6% of its market-making volume in November."

Competitive Advantages May Gradually Converge

Market making is not a highly profitable business. Having multiple companies compete to price the same prediction market naturally compresses the spread that can be profitable. In other words, the more market makers there are in a prediction market, the less profit can be made per bet.

However, although prediction markets with affiliated market makers may wish to limit the number of market makers, the reality is far more complex. A lack of institutional capital support could lead to insufficient overall market liquidity, which would negatively impact the user experience unless affiliated market makers inject significant capital (and assume corresponding risks) to fill the gap.

This means gambling companies will inevitably compete with financial institutions on the same field, vying for order flow from retail bettors.

Ultimately, as Wall Street institutions hire talent with specialized sports backgrounds (and vice versa), the competitive advantages of both sides may gradually converge. But for now, at least, gambling companies entering prediction markets are confident in their chances of success.


Twitter:https://twitter.com/BitpushNewsCN

BitPush TG Discussion Group:https://t.me/BitPushCommunity

BitPush TG Subscription: https://t.me/bitpush

Original link:https://www.bitpush.news/articles/7611525

Пов'язані питання

QWhat are the two main groups competing in the prediction market, as mentioned in the article?

AThe two main groups are professional financial trading firms from Wall Street and traditional sports betting service providers.

QWhich traditional sports betting companies have ventured into the prediction market?

ADraftKings, Fanatics, and FanDuel have ventured into the prediction market.

QWhat is the name of Fanatics' affiliated market maker, and what is its name derived from?

AFanatics' affiliated market maker is named Morton St. Market Maker LLC, derived from the street where its parent company's office is located in New York City.

QAccording to the article, what core competency do betting companies believe gives them an advantage in market making?

ABetting companies believe their core competency is the ability to accurately price complex and interconnected outcomes, which is a fundamental part of their daily operations.

QWhat challenge do Wall Street firms face when entering the sports prediction market, as per industry insiders?

AWall Street firms lack long-term experience in setting odds for sports events, which presents a significant challenge in managing the complex risks associated with in-game developments like injuries or weather changes.

Пов'язані матеріали

What's the Connection Between Pinduoduo's Huang Zheng and Blockchain?

This text explores the unexpected connection between Pinduoduo founder Colin Huang and blockchain, as suggested in his article *Turning Capitalism Upside Down*. Huang argues Pinduoduo's core business is about managing "uncertainty." He posits that wealth flows to the rich because they absorb life's uncertainties (e.g., illness, job loss) that devastate the poor, who pay a premium for certainty through insurance or stable prices. Pinduoduo's model attempts a "reverse insurance": by aggregating consumer demand via group-buying and flash sales, it creates a large, predictable order for manufacturers. This certainty allows factories to remove risk premiums, passing savings back as lower prices, thus partially reversing the wealth flow. The key obstacle, Huang notes, is that an individual's buying intent is an unreliable promise. He then asks if blockchain is the natural solution for this "reverse insurance." The text elaborates that blockchain, through smart contracts with binding deposits, could transform casual intent into a costly-to-break, enforceable commitment. This replaces interpersonal trust with coded rules, making promises credible, pricable, and resistant to fraud. Finally, the author draws a parallel to Bitcoin, framing two paths to creating certainty: the "Pinduoduo path" of aggregating decentralized will into scale, and the "Bitcoin path" of locking rules into immutable code. Both sacrifice something—personal freedom or system flexibility—to manufacture trust and predictability.

链捕手18 хв тому

What's the Connection Between Pinduoduo's Huang Zheng and Blockchain?

链捕手18 хв тому

The Storage Magnate Who Conquered a Trillion-Dollar Kingdom, Yet Ultimately Could Not Become the Richest

**Summary:** "The Memory Magnate Who Built a Trillion-Dollar Empire, Yet Never Became the Richest" explores the journey of Zhu Yiming, founder of GigaDevice (603986) and co-founder of the soon-to-IPO ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT). The article positions GigaDevice, a fabless chip designer now valued at ~¥340 billion, as a prequel to the massive IDM (Integrated Device Manufacturer) venture, CXMT. Starting in 2005 with minimal capital, Zhu strategically "picked up the pieces" by focusing on niche markets like NOR Flash and microcontrollers (MCUs), areas major players were exiting. This allowed GigaDevice to grow into a diversified semiconductor company, maintaining robust profitability even during industry downturns by controlling costs. However, the piece argues that in the highly cyclical and capital-intensive memory chip industry, the fabless model has limits. True resilience and scale require the ability for "counter-cyclical expansion" – investing heavily during downturns – a tactic only possible for IDMs like Samsung or SK Hynix. This insight led Zhu to partner with the Hefei city government in 2016 to establish CXMT, an IDM focused on DRAM. Zhu's symbolic moves, like forfeiting salary and diluting his equity, were crucial in securing the massive state and bank funding needed. CXMT's equipment base is now valued even higher than that of BYD's vast auto manufacturing empire. Despite the potential for CXMT to reach a market cap of ¥1-2 trillion upon its IPO, Zhu's indirect stake in both companies is estimated below 3%, placing his personal wealth far below that of China's top billionaires. The article concludes that his strategic vision built a trillion-yuan memory landscape, but the capital structure necessary to achieve it precluded a personal fortune of similar scale.

marsbit25 хв тому

The Storage Magnate Who Conquered a Trillion-Dollar Kingdom, Yet Ultimately Could Not Become the Richest

marsbit25 хв тому

XRP Ledger Daily Fees Drop Below $400 As Network Activity Question Returns

The XRP Ledger is drawing attention as daily network fees have fallen below $400. While low fees align with XRPL's design for affordable transactions and are often seen as a strength, the metric can also serve as an indicator of network demand and paid transaction volume. This data point of around $3,100 in weekly fee burn highlights the stark contrast with higher-fee chains like Ethereum and Bitcoin. The development fuels an ongoing debate. Proponents view low fees as a sign of efficiency and accessibility, while critics may question if the network is generating sufficient high-value activity relative to its market cap and payments-focused narrative. The article cautions against overstating the finding, noting a single low-fee day does not signify network failure. It instead adds context to discussions about XRPL's usage, especially alongside Ripple's broader initiatives in stablecoins (RLUSD), AI payments, and enterprise infrastructure. The report recommends monitoring for a fee rebound, checking transaction counts for a fuller picture, and confirming the trend via native explorers like Bithomp. It frames the story within a larger market shift where on-chain data, protocol updates, and infrastructure developments are becoming crucial alongside price action. The editorial stance is to present the verified data, explain its significance for assessing network activity, and avoid hype, positioning it as part of the daily crypto conversation.

bitcoinist4 год тому

XRP Ledger Daily Fees Drop Below $400 As Network Activity Question Returns

bitcoinist4 год тому

Торгівля

Спот
Ф'ючерси
活动图片