Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · Jul 8
Expert Says $0-Stake Prediction Markets Can Work Despite Billions in World Cup Wagers
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · Jul 8

Expert Says $0-Stake Prediction Markets Can Work Despite Billions in World Cup Wagers

2 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · Jul 8

Summary

  • A prediction-market veteran of 25 years argues the industry does not need real-money betting to aggregate useful forecasts, challenging a core defense of platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket.
  • Billions of dollars are being wagered on World Cup outcomes, but he says the claim that cash stakes are essential is false and distracts from how crowd forecasts actually work.
  • Recent scandals have sharpened that critique, including suspected insider trading tied to military operations, manipulated temperature readings and threats against journalists.
  • The argument points to a lower-risk model for prediction markets as scrutiny grows over whether financial incentives improve accuracy or simply magnify abuse.

Insights

Can prediction markets ever be accurate without the financial stakes that seem to invite corruption?
If a few insiders dominate winnings, is the 'wisdom of crowds' just a myth funded by retail bettors?
With military secrets sold for profit on betting sites, can regulators outpace anonymous crypto traders?