Prediction markets are increasingly being framed not as gambling platforms but as vehicles for monetizing information, though founders acknowledged the line can blur.

What to know:

    Founders argue prediction markets monetize information, though user intent varies.Onchain transparency helps, but information asymmetry remains a core challenge.How platforms address manipulation and disclosure will shape institutional acceptance.
  • Founders argue prediction markets monetize information, though user intent varies.
  • Onchain transparency helps, but information asymmetry remains a core challenge.
  • How platforms address manipulation and disclosure will shape institutional acceptance.
  • Prediction markets are increasingly being framed not as gambling platforms but as vehicles for monetizing information, though founders acknowledged the line can blur depending on user intent atConsensus Hong Kong 2026.

    Ding X, founder of Predict.fun, argued that prediction markets more closely resemble insurance underwriting or poker than roulette. “It’s more information trading and trying to hedge risk, rather than gambling,” he said, distinguishing skill-based forecasting from games where long-term odds guarantee losses.

    Farokh Sarmad, co-founder of DASTAN, agreed that speculation exists but described the sector as “a multi-trillion dollar asset class in the making.” In his view, prediction markets are simply “financializing information,” allowing participants to monetize insight rather than leaving value solely with media companies or bookmakers.

    Jared Dillinger, CEO of New Prontera Group and a former professional athlete, said the classification depends largely on how platforms are built and used. “It just depends on the eyes of the beholder,” he said, adding that prediction markets function as “an information asset class,” even if some users approach them like bets.

    The more pressing challenge is insider trading. High-profile examples—from leaked entertainment setlists to geopolitical developments—have underscored the risk of information asymmetry.

    “Insider information is not okay,” Sarmad said, noting that blockchain transparency can make suspicious wallets visible. Still, Dillinger acknowledged enforcement limits. “There’s always going to be some loopholes that people will find.”

    As trading volumes rise and regulators take notice, founders agreed that surveillance tools, clearer disclosure norms and stronger platform governance will determine whether prediction markets mature into a recognized financial category—or remain viewed as speculative betting.

    More For You

    Accelerating Convergence Between Traditional and On-Chain Finance in 2026?

    More For You

    The Genius Act ripple effect: Sui executives say institutional demand has never been higher

    Evan Cheng and Stephen Mackintosh said 2025 marked a turning point for institutional adoption, with tokenization and agentic commerce emerging as the next frontier.

    What to know:

      Executives cited ETF flows, DAT growth and major trading firms entering crypto.Tokenization and instant settlement could blur the line between traditional and decentralized markets.Low-latency design and composable tooling aim to power AI-driven and tokenized financial use cases.
  • Executives cited ETF flows, DAT growth and major trading firms entering crypto.
  • Tokenization and instant settlement could blur the line between traditional and decentralized markets.
  • Low-latency design and composable tooling aim to power AI-driven and tokenized financial use cases.
  • BlackRock's digital assets head: Leverage-driven volatility threatens bitcoin’s narrative

    XRP outruns bitcoin, ether after investors piled into the recent crash

    Wall Street remains bullish on bitcoin while offshore traders retreat

    The Genius Act ripple effect: Sui executives say institutional demand has never been higher

    Elon Musk's X to launch crypto and stock trading in ‘couple weeks’

    Galaxy’s Steve Kurz sees ‘great convergence’ driving crypto’s long-term outlook

    Crypto group counters Wall Street bankers with its own stablecoin principles for bill

    Recapping Consensus Hong Kong

    Trump-linked Truth Social seeks SEC approval for two crypto ETFs

    Wall Street analysts slash Coinbase price targets after Q4 miss — but shares rally

    Ethereum Foundation leadership shake-up: Tomasz Stańczak out as co-executive director