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Do prediction market bettors make anything better?

4/18/202632 min

Have you noticed a lot of young people getting into antenna-maxxing as alpha? Or, maybe searching for any bit of copium after they fat-fingered and got rinsed? Or maybe they farmed during a yes-fest on Mention Markets resulting in some serious printing? 

If none of that made sense to you, then we have the perfect episode for you. 

Prediction markets have taken off in the past few years, using the same legal loopholes as the crypto market to essentially claim they are a “swap,” or “futures market,” similar to that of the totally legal grain and pork belly markets, and less like the state-regulated sports gambling market. 

And they are great for the bondsharps who print on the regular (or, in English, “well known market makers who often make a lot of money”). 

These prediction market companies exist because they’ve convinced regulators that they’re also great for the rest of us. They're adding new knowledge to the world. Making us more informed about the future. 

On today’s episode, the case Kalshi has been making to regulators, the courts and the public as to why what looks like gambling and seems like gambling … is not. Why that argument’s kinda been working. And – if no one stops them – what prediction markets could do to our future.

For more, listen to former CFTC Commissioner Kristin Johnson on The Indicator from Planet Money.

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This episode of Planet Money was hosted by Bobby Allyn and Mary Childs. It was produced by Sam Yellowhorse Kesler. It was edited by Marianne McCune, fact-checked by Sierra Juarez, and engineered by Cena Loffredo. Alex Goldmark is Planet Money*’s executive producer.*

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First 90 seconds
  1. Mary Childs· Host0:00

    Across the country, parents are taking their kids out of traditional public schools and opting for private or charter schools instead.

  2. Bobby Allyn· Host0:08

    My kids have to come first for me. The greater good has to come second.

  3. Mary Childs· Host0:12

    On the Sunday Story, we go to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, to see how going all in on school choice is leaving some students behind. Listen now on the Up First podcast on the NPR app.

  4. Speaker 20:23

    So figured out a way to pitch this?

  5. Mary Childs· Host0:28

    We know books aren't exactly a new medium.

  6. Speaker 20:31

    You know, a friend of mine once told me about a deeper bond with the product, nostalgia. It's delicate but potent.

  7. Mary Childs· Host0:38

    Sure. But let's not overthink this.

  8. Speaker 20:40

    He told me that in Greek, nostalgia literally means the pain from an old wound. It's a twinge in your heart far more powerful than memory alone. Books aren't a spaceship but a time machine. Spaceships? Listen, why don't we just tell listeners straight that it is called The Planet Money Book. It has a collection of some of our favorite stories with updates and tons of new original reporting. Plus, it's available in bookstores now. Wouldn't that- Back home again. Okay. To a place we know we are loved.

  9. Mary Childs· Host1:10

    This is Planet Money from NPR. My friend and colleague, Bobby Allyn, has been covering the bananas growth of prediction markets for NPR. You know, the ones where you can bet on everything from Taylor Swift's wedding date to the war in

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