Kalshi has reportedly held early IPO talks as prediction-market revenue surges, showing how event contracts are moving toward Wall Street.Kalshi has reportedly held early IPO talks as prediction-market revenue surges, showing how event contracts are moving toward Wall Street.

Kalshi IPO Talk Shows Prediction Markets Are Moving Into Wall Street’s Mainstream

2026/06/20 07:30
4 min read
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Prediction markets are no longer sitting at the edge of the financial conversation.

Kalshi has reportedly held early discussions with investment banks about a future initial public offering, according to a report on the company’s fundraising and revenue trajectory. The talks are described as informal, and the same reporting suggests any listing would still be at least a year away. Even so, the numbers around the platform show why Wall Street is paying attention.

TL;DR

  • Kalshi has reportedly held early IPO discussions, but no listing has been formally announced.
  • The company’s annualized revenue run rate is said to have moved above $2 billion after a surge in sports and event-contract activity.
  • The key detail is not only IPO timing, but Kalshi reportedly asking banks to integrate with its platform if they want advisory roles.
  • The story adds another layer to the fast-growing fight over regulated event contracts and prediction markets.

A prediction market story becomes a capital markets story

The important part of the Kalshi report is not that an IPO is imminent. It is not. The more interesting point is that prediction markets have become large enough for investment banks to treat them as a serious capital-markets opportunity.

According to the report, Kalshi’s annualized revenue run rate has climbed above $2 billion, roughly tripling levels reported late last year. That kind of expansion would be eye-catching in any fintech category, but it is especially notable in prediction markets, where regulatory scrutiny and public attention have both increased quickly.

Sports-linked event contracts appear to be a major driver. The NBA and FIFA World Cup have helped bring mainstream attention and volume into products that once looked niche. For crypto-native traders, that matters because prediction markets increasingly sit in the same wider conversation as perpetual futures, event contracts, and other products that blur the line between trading, forecasting, and wagering.

Why bank integration matters

The reported condition attached to Kalshi’s IPO talks may be even more revealing than the IPO itself. Investment banks seeking advisory roles were reportedly asked to integrate with Kalshi’s platform so institutional clients could trade directly.

That would make the relationship more operational than a traditional IPO beauty parade. Instead of banks simply competing for fees, they would be asked to plug into the market infrastructure itself. If that model holds, it points to prediction markets becoming a distribution channel for financial institutions, not just a consumer-facing trading venue.

It also shows why incumbents are paying close attention. Event-contract platforms are growing at the same time regulators are being asked to clarify which products count as futures, swaps, or something else entirely. The business opportunity is becoming large enough that the legal definitions matter much more.

The risk is overreading early talks

There is still a clear caution here. Kalshi has not publicly announced an IPO plan, and the talks are described as early and informal. A possible listing in 2027 or 2028 would leave plenty of time for market conditions, regulation, and revenue growth to shift.

Still, the broader trend is difficult to ignore. Prediction markets are gaining liquidity, political attention, institutional curiosity, and user demand at the same time. Whether Kalshi lists soon or not, the sector is already moving from speculative curiosity into mainstream market structure.

For crypto markets, that makes Kalshi a useful signal. The same appetite for fast, liquid, event-based risk is part of what has driven growth in crypto derivatives. The question now is how much of that activity ends up inside regulated US venues, and how much remains offshore or on-chain.

This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.

This report is based on information from The Information. at The Information

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