Prediction Markets as a Market Primitive: Building Multilayer Infrastructure

author & date of publication: Tomas | 4.3.2026

Introduction: Information Aggregation as Financial Infrastructure

In the traditional world, information is asymmetric, fragmented, and often burdened by the cognitive biases of experts who bear no financial responsibility for their errors. Prediction markets radically transform this model. They are not oracles, but decentralized computational engines that convert the dispersed knowledge of millions of entities into a single, highly liquid metric: market price.

While public opinion polls measure only “cheap talk”, prediction markets require a capital commitment. This principle of relentless feedback means that those who are correct accumulate capital and influence over future prices, while those who are wrong lose it. The result is a constantly refining source of truth that often reacts to global events faster than Bloomberg terminals or news channels.

Market Architecture: From “Yes/No” to Sophisticated Intervals

Most users associate prediction markets with the simplest format, but the reality is much richer:

  • Binary Markets: The classic format featuring a question with only a “Yes” or “No” answer. Upon resolution, the contract pays out at full value (e.g., $1) or expires worthless ($0). Ideal for events like “Will the SEC approve the ETF this week?”.
  • Categorical Markets: An extension of the binary model to multiple options (e.g., “Which of these five candidates will win the election?”). Each option carries its own price and probability.
  • Scalar/Range Markets: Here, you bet on a specific value within a defined range. For example, instead of betting on whether inflation will drop, you bet on exactly how many basis points it will shift. The payout is linearly dependent on where the final value lands. This type of market is crucial for financial analysts and macroeconomic forecasting.

 

What can be bet on today?

The spectrum of markets is expanding dramatically and now covers almost every measurable variable of human existence:

  • Crypto & Macro: Not just the price of Bitcoin, but also hash rate levels, network upgrade timelines (e.g., Ethereum Pectra), Fed rate decisions, or trading volumes on decentralized exchanges.
  • Tech & Science: Success rates of SpaceX launches, milestones in AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) development, or the results of clinical trials for new drugs.
  • Geopolitics & Legislation: Outcomes of legal battles (e.g., Ripple vs. SEC), the passage of bills in specific jurisdictions, or the probability of diplomatic agreements versus conflicts.
  • Climate & Catastrophes: Predictions of rainfall totals, sea levels, or the occurrence of natural disasters, serving as an effective form of parametric insurance.

 

Strategic Significance: Hedging as “Insurance Against Reality”

For investors, a prediction market is not a venue for gambling; it is a vital tool for hedging. If you hold a portfolio heavily dependent on a specific technological narrative, a prediction market allows you to open a position against that outcome. If the negative scenario unfolds, the profit from the prediction market offsets the loss in your portfolio. It represents the only financial layer that allows for the efficient trading of event-specific risk that traditional derivatives (such as options or futures) cannot cover.

Exponential Rise and the Battle for Dominance

While only two years ago prediction markets were considered a niche interest, current data from February 2026 paints a picture of a highly dynamic, multi-billion dollar industry. The market has moved past its maturation phase, and today we are witnessing a fierce battle for liquidity among several dominant ecosystems. A significant signal of institutional adoption is the fact that Nasdaq seeks SEC approval for prediction-style binary options tied to the flagship 100 index, bringing prediction mechanisms into the very core of traditional finance. Also noteworthy is the recent news that Predict.fun has completed its strategic acquisition of Probable.

Notional Volume: This metric reflects the total financial depth and the market’s ability to absorb capital. February data shows a clear dominance by Kalshi with a volume of $9.9 billion. Following closely is Polymarket at $7.9 billion, confirming that these two entities form a duopoly controlling the majority of global prediction money flow. Opinion Labs is the “breakout” performer with $3.1 billion, suggesting a growing investor appetite for alternative platforms outside the mainstream.

Transactions: In terms of transaction count, Polymarket wins by a landslide with 80.7 million transactions. This indicates extremely high retail activity and the deployment of algorithmic bots that constantly arbitrage and correct prices. Kalshi, with 70.8 million transactions, maintains high efficiency; when combined with its top-tier volume, this points to the presence of large institutional players. Other platforms lag significantly in this category.

Unique Users: The user base is the best indicator of adoption. Polymarket leads by a massive margin with 671,000 active users (data for Kalshi is currently unavailable). The second-largest community belongs to Opinion Labs with 81,000 users, while specialized platforms like Predict.fun serve approximately 24,000 users.

Open Interest: Open Interest – the value of capital locked in active bets – reached record levels in February 2026, with Kalshi holding $492 million and Polymarket $410 million. The growth of total Open Interest toward the $1 billion mark confirms that users are utilizing these markets for long-term hedging rather than just short-term speculation. This indicator is crucial for ecosystem stability, as it demonstrates participants’ sustained trust in the final settlement of events.

Structural Challenges and Barriers to Mass Adoption

Despite staggering growth and billion-dollar volumes, prediction markets face profound structural hurdles that could impede their transition into the true mainstream.

Capital Inefficiency: The High Cost of Participation

One of the primary drags on the sector is capital inefficiency. Unlike traditional exchanges where you can trade on margin (leverage) by depositing only a fraction of the position value, prediction markets typically require full collateralization. This makes them 10x to 20x less efficient in terms of capital utility than modern crypto derivatives. Furthermore, your capital is “trapped” in the market until the event’s final resolution. Market leaders like Polymarket are beginning to address this by offering yields (e.g., around 4%) on locked capital in certain long-dated markets, ensuring the time value of money is not entirely lost.

 

Liquidity Fragmentation: A Cracked Mirror of Truth

Fragmentation is a critical threat to forecasting accuracy. When the same event is traded across multiple platforms or fragmented into different market types, capital is split into isolated pools. This dilutes price discovery, as no single market possesses enough depth to reflect a true global signal. For institutional players, this fragmentation makes it nearly impossible to execute large trades without causing significant adverse price slippage.

 

The “Dead” Liquidity Problem

In traditional markets like oil or equities, liquidity is persistent and cumulative. Prediction markets operate differently: once an event occurs, the market ceases to exist, and liquidity must be rebuilt from scratch for the next question. This is unattractive for Market Makers who cannot seamlessly rotate their positions.

Additionally, the ecosystem lacks “natural hedgers”. While an airline must hedge against rising fuel prices, few entities have a systemic economic necessity to hedge against election results or specific scientific milestones. This often leaves professional traders profiting primarily at the expense of less-informed retail users. Without constant subsidies and incentives, spreads on most markets would likely widen to prohibitive levels.

 

Truth or Just a Crowd Echo?

The core promise of these platforms is the Wisdom of Crowds, yet practice reveals two psychological pitfalls:

  • Reflexivity: If a market shows a 95% probability of an event occurring, the affected stakeholders may change their behavior based on that data, thereby altering the outcome. The market shifts from a passive observer to an active participant in the narrative.
  • The Echo Effect: In high-profile events, participants often stop trading on new information and instead mirror the prevailing consensus found on social media. In these cases, the market doesn’t uncover “new truth” – it simply quantifies an existing echo chamber.

 

Oracle Risks and Manipulation

The integrity of a market relies on the Oracle the entity that decides the final outcome. While decentralized oracles are transparent, they can be vulnerable to manipulation by wealthy actors if the value at stake exceeds the cost of corrupting the oracle itself. Furthermore, the specific phrasing of a market’s rules can be engineered to favor one side. Without rigorous oversight, a single “whale” can move a thin market to manipulate the perceived reality or the final settlement.

 

Regulation and Licensing: The Battle for Legitimacy

The legal status of prediction markets remains inconsistent globally, creating a risky “gray zone”. While licensed platforms like Kalshi must comply with strict regulations and limit the types of listed markets, decentralized protocols often operate in a legal vacuum. This clash between regulators, who demand forecasting utility, and platforms, which profit from betting volume, leads to inconsistent decisions regarding product features.

Prediction Market Technology Stack 2.0

Prediction markets are no longer just a product category; they are becoming a fundamental layer for information aggregation and risk transfer. This transformation into a “market primitive” means that a complex technological stack is emerging above the core engine, enabling scaling, specialization, and mass distribution.

I. Settlement Layer

The settlement layer is the cornerstone of the entire system, where the blockchain serves as an indisputable judge and guarantor of all payouts. This purpose is served by established public networks such as Ethereum (ETH), Polygon (POL), Solana (SOL), or BNB Chain, as well as specialized AppChains for instance, XO Chain, SX Rollup, and likely a future L2 from Polymarket.

Thanks to smart contracts, profit distribution occurs automatically and securely immediately after a result is confirmed, completely eliminating the risk of an operator blocking funds. Furthermore, the transition to specialized chains allows platforms to handle massive user surges with minimal fees and lightning speed – performance that general-purpose networks theoretically cannot guarantee during peak times. Own infrastructure grants platforms full control over security and rules, merging the speed of modern exchanges with the ironclad certainty of decentralized settlement.

The technological design of Hyperliquid’s HIP-4 represents a shift in capital efficiency through the introduction of Event Futures and Parlays.

  • Event Futures introduce “synthetic delta” into the system, allowing traders to speculate on linear changes in market probability over time instead of merely waiting for a final binary outcome. This mechanism transforms predictions into tradable probability curves, where collateral can be adjusted only to expected price fluctuations, naturally paving the way for margin trading and efficient leverage.
  • Parlays function as composite risk units combining multiple events into a joint return based on “AND” logic. This structure creates yield convexity and allows for efficient capital recycling across multiple scenarios without the risk of liquidation.

II. Market Engine Layer

This layer represents the technological heart of the system, where order matching and continuous price discovery take place. While lower layers handle security and data logging, the Market Engine Layer defines economic efficiency and the user trading experience.

On-chain vs. Off-chain Execution

  • On-chain Execution: The entire matching process occurs within a smart contract, ensuring maximum transparency and censorship resistance.
  • Off-chain Execution: External matching engines are used to achieve latency comparable to traditional exchanges. An example is Kalshi Klear, which operates as a federally regulated clearinghouse. Orders are matched in milliseconds off-chain, eliminating gas fees and enabling high-frequency trading, while the resulting positions are subsequently anchored securely in the Settlement Layer.

Matching Mechanisms: Meeting Supply and Demand

Market efficiency depends on the mathematical model that determines the current price:

  • CLOB (Central Limit Order Book): This order-book-based model is the preferred choice for professionals due to low spreads and precise pricing. Key representatives include Polymarket, Kalshi, Opinion Labs, Limitless, Probable, and Predict.fun.
  • AMM (Automated Market Maker): Algorithmic models that ensure constant liquidity even for less popular events; used by platforms like Myriad or XO Markets.
  • Sportsbooks: Specialized engines optimized for dynamic sports betting with real-time odds, such as SX Bets, Overtime.io, or Sport.fun.

Driving the Evolution of UX and Capital Efficiency

The market is constantly evolving toward better UX and higher capital efficiency, as demonstrated by the following projects:

  • Trepa: Trepa radically changes the game by abandoning the binary “all-or-nothing” model. Instead of betting on whether an event will occur, users predict exact figures for macroeconomic indicators like inflation or GDP. The key innovation is accuracy-scaled payout, where the reward directly depends on the precision of the forecast (the closer to the actual result, the higher the yield, up to a 100x limit). This Solana-based model transforms prediction markets from gambling into a sophisticated tool for intellectual speculation.
  • Noise.xyz: Noise focuses on the Attention Economy. Rather than betting on events, users speculate on the relevance and cultural impact of trends, brands, or narratives in real-time. The platform utilizes dynamic bonding curves and social media data to create continuous markets that resemble stock trading, but with “mindshare” as the underlying asset.
  • Space: One of the first on-chain CLOB markets to introduce up to 10x leverage. This step radically addresses the previously criticized capital inefficiency, allowing traders to open significantly larger positions with less collateral.

III. Protocol & Coordination Layer

This layer acts as the “brain” of the entire ecosystem, coordinating rules, ascertaining the truth, and connecting markets with the real world. While market engines handle execution, this layer focuses on creation and evaluation.

Resolution Mechanisms (Oracles)

Secure and indisputable evaluation of outcomes is the bedrock of every market.

  • UMA (Optimistic Oracle): Currently the most widely used resolution mechanism, powering platforms like Polymarket. It operates on the principle of “optimistic” verification with a dispute option, allowing for efficient evaluation without the need for constant data logging on the blockchain.
  • Opinion AI: Acts as an agentic oracle for the Opinion.Trade platform. it facilitates both the creation and evaluation of prediction markets by converting user prompts into strict binary contracts with clear settlement rules. To determine outcomes, the system combines data from external oracles (e.g., Chainlink) with its own analysis, which is then validated by a “jury” of other AI models (Claude, ChatGPT, Grok) and independent human reviewers. The entire process occurs within Trusted Execution Environments (TEEs), which, combined with multi-stage verification, eliminates manipulation risks. Future plans include transitioning to decentralized dispute resolution via token holders.
  • Chainlink & Pyth: Leading oracle providers that supply markets with real-time data from financial and non-financial sources, essential for the automated settlement of contracts.

Smart Contracts and Building Blocks

Instead of building applications from scratch, developers use ready-made “building blocks” (Programmable Modules) that allow them to launch a market or app in minutes.

  • Conditional Tokens Framework (CTF – Gnosis): The industry standard for creating “conditional tokens,” allowing deposited collateral to be split into sets of tokens representing all possible event outcomes. Its main strength lies in supporting combinatorial markets through nesting, enabling complex bets on chains of events (“What happens to X, if Y occurs?”). As a proven cornerstone for Polymarket and others, it ensures user positions are fully backed, programmable, and easily integrated into further layers.
  • Azuro: Serves as a building block for betting and predictions, providing ready-made outcome logic and liquidity for third-party platforms.
  • DFlow & Jupiter: DFlow wraps regulated Kalshi contracts into SPL tokens on Solana, making them accessible to DeFi applications. Jupiter, through its Prediction API, enables the integration of markets directly into popular trading terminals and apps on Solana.
  • Zeitgeist: A full-scale protocol and blockchain (on Polkadot) offering an SDK for builders to create their own applications atop its technical core, including native support for Futarchy.

Governance Integration: The Rise of Futarchy

Integration with DAO tools where prediction markets serve as the basis for decision-making – a concept known as Futarchy, where an organization’s strategy is decided by market estimates of its future success.

  • MetaDAO (Futarchy): The most advanced implementation of market-based governance, operating on the principle: “Vote on values, bet on beliefs.” Instead of traditional voting (one token = one vote), MetaDAO uses prediction markets to decide strategy. Two parallel markets are created: one for the scenario where a proposal passes (“Pass”) and one for when it is rejected (“Fail”). If the market predicts that passing the proposal will lead to a higher DAO token price than rejecting it, the proposal is automatically approved. This model eliminates political influence and focuses purely on maximizing the organization’s future value.

The Coordination Layer: Yuki

Yuki acts as a coordination and liquidity “cushioning layer” built atop Polymarket. It addresses the issue of low on-chain depth by providing additional financial incentives (often from third parties). These rewards are paid out regardless of trade direction for behaviors that improve market quality – such as maintaining tight spreads or providing continuous liquidity – reducing risk for market makers without skewing price discovery. The process is simplified for users via tokenized vaults (ERC-4626 standard), which automate complex strategies and transform binary tokens into structured financial products with improved risk profiles.

IV. Apps & Distribution Layer

The uppermost layer is where the end-user interacts with the system. This is the stage where mass adoption occurs through interfaces that are either familiar to people or designed for maximum accessibility.

Trading Terminals and Aggregators

Professional terminals such as Fireplace, Verso, OCX, TradeFox, and Kalshinomics are transforming prediction markets into true “market primitives”. They provide high-performance interfaces that feel like modern trading applications rather than mathematical puzzles. These platforms focus on maximizing Alpha & Information Flow by integrating AI research layers and social sentiment aggregators, helping traders identify trends before they hit the mainstream.

A key feature is the drastic reduction of News-to-Trade latency, achieved through “One-Click Trading,” whale-watching alerts, and custom scripting environments for automation. Advanced Risk Management is also integral, offering unified P&L tracking and hedging tools across various markets – essential for professional portfolio management.

Simultaneously, aggregators like Converge, Kairos, Matchr, Fors, Wandly, and Chance tackle liquidity fragmentation via Multi-venue integration and Smart Order Routing (SOR). By creating virtual order books and normalizing disparate market standards, these tools ensure users always receive the best possible price, regardless of the platform where the market originated. Beyond simple routing, these aggregators introduce automation through investment vaults, copy-trading, and agentic systems, making sophisticated strategies accessible to a wider audience. This layer of aggregation and automation is what ultimately unlocks new modes of governance, financing, and information prioritization in the public sphere.

DeFi

By tokenizing positions (e.g., via ERC-1155 or SPL), these “bets” can be utilized as full-fledged assets for loans, leveraged trades, or sophisticated capital management.

Lending & Borrowing

These protocols solve the problem of “trapped” capital in long-term bets by allowing open positions to be used as collateral.

  • Gondor: An efficient capital tool built on Morpho infrastructure, allowing users to pledge their YES/NO tokens from Polymarket to borrow USDC with an LTV (Loan-to-Value) of up to 50%.
  • PolyLend: A purely peer-to-peer (P2P) approach where borrowers and lenders are matched directly on-chain. The system uses escrow contracts for secure storage and triggers transparent Dutch auctions for liquidation in case of default.
  • Robin Markets: A unique protocol that eliminates the opportunity cost of allocated capital. It allows users to deposit prediction tokens into specialized staking vaults for merging. If a vault holds opposing positions on the same event, the system merges them back into the underlying USDC, which is then deployed into DeFi protocols like Aave to generate interest. Users maintain their exposure to the event outcome while earning passive yield.

Options and Margin Trading

For advanced risk management and aggressive speculation:

  • Polyoptions: Brings fully collateralized binary options to prediction markets, allowing traders to bet on volatility or hedge against sudden probability shifts before an event is resolved.
  • Ultramarkets: A margin platform providing high leverage on specific events, allowing positions that significantly exceed available collateral. Both projects are built atop Polymarket.

Managed Vaults

  • PolyFund: A decentralized social trading platform where expert predictors with proven track records manage funds that investors can delegate capital to in exchange for a performance fee.
  • ZEIT Finance: Introduces Principal Protected Vaults (PPV). These vaults invest the principal in safe lending protocols and use only the generated yield for predictions. This creates a “no-loss” betting model where users always recover their initial deposit.

Delegated Dispute Resolution

  • uma.rocks: Allows users to delegate their UMA tokens to a pool managed by a voting committee of verified experts from the Polymarket and UMA communities. This allows users to earn staking rewards and voting yields passively without having to analyze evidence themselves.

Automation and AI Agents

Autonomous entities analyze vast amounts of data and execute trades with sub-perceptual latency. Key tools include BetMoar (official bot provider for Polymarket) and ArbBets (specializing in lightning-fast arbitrage). Automation is democratized via PolyGun (a dominant Telegram trading bot) and PredictEngine.ai (no-code bot builder). The pinnacle of intelligent betting is represented by AI agents like Sire Agent and Aixbet, which use machine learning to autonomously manage sports vaults and optimize bets based on deep statistics.

 

Consumer Apps

Financial giants like Robinhood and Coinbase have integrated prediction markets as standard investment tools alongside stocks and crypto. Robinhood utilizes event contracts (e.g., from Kalshi) for macroeconomic speculation, while Coinbase connects users directly to Polymarket’s on-chain liquidity, handling all technical complexity in the background. This trend is bolstered by mass adoption in media:

  • Barchart (as of November 2025) fully integrates Kalshi data feeds.
  • CNN licenses this data to display real-time odds in its news broadcasts, validating prediction markets as a primary information source.

In the sports segment, leaders like DraftKings and FanDuel are joined by PrizePicks, which integrates Kalshi-powered markets into its fantasy sports app. Strategic partnerships, such as the NHL licensing official data for hockey markets since October 2025, further drive this shift. Supported by seamless access via wallets like Phantom and Trust Wallet, the technology has been completely abstracted. Users no longer distinguish between a bet and an on-chain contract; prediction markets have become the indispensable “truth filter” people turn to for an objective view of future probabilities.

Conclusion: A Professional Operating System for Truth

In 2026, prediction markets have definitively established themselves as a professional “operating system for truth”. This system is no longer perceived as a mere speculative platform, but as a decentralized computational engine that aggregates the dispersed knowledge of millions of entities through market price into a single, highly liquid signal. Unlike traditional polls and media, which often deal in non-binding opinions, prediction markets require a direct capital commitment. This relentlessly eliminates cognitive biases and creates the most accurate possible filter of reality.

A crucial milestone is their integration into mainstream media – the fact that CNN utilizes this data as a valid probability metric definitively legitimizes prediction markets in the eyes of the global public. To achieve true mass and institutional adoption, however, the focus is now shifting toward building a comprehensive ecosystem and professional-grade tools. This includes advanced trading terminals, liquidity aggregators, and sophisticated risk management systems capable of handling high-frequency data and massive volumes.

It is this layer of professional infrastructure, combined with total technological abstraction, that allows prediction markets to function as the most accurate filter of reality, surpassing the capabilities of any traditional institution through its sheer speed and objectivity.