Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour recently commented on the completion of a customized commodity trade on the Kalshi platform. According to Odaily, Mansour highlighted liquidity as a historical bottleneck in institutional risk transfer, due to the lack of pricing benchmarks for various risks, such as WTI for oil. Kalshi has developed a community of top global superforecasters, leading in risk pricing, which allows for broader pricing benchmarks for institutional and individual challenges. Institutions are beginning to integrate these benchmarks into traditional asset pricing models, with data usage and integration rapidly expanding.
The next phase involves using these benchmarks for risk transfer through large trades and requests for quotes (RFQ). Although still in its early stages, this phase is taking shape. Estimating the market size for non-traditional financial risk transfer is challenging, but comparisons can be made to the reinsurance market and banks' derivatives departments: reinsurance is approximately $700 billion, insurance-linked securities and parametric insurance (like catastrophe bonds) are around $120-135 billion, and bank derivatives (structured products, dealer-to-dealer, exotic products) range from $200-400 billion. The current market is about $1-1.5 trillion, mostly illiquid and over-the-counter (OTC), involving single counterparties.
Whenever major OTC markets shift to exchange trading, significant growth occurs due to established pricing benchmarks, narrowed bid-ask spreads, reduced Wall Street elite access monopoly, and new participant entry. Interest rate swaps have grown 10-15 times, stock options 20-30 times, and energy derivatives 5-8 times. Institutional use cases for prediction markets could form a $10-15 trillion market, with further potential depending on the democratization of products currently limited to Wall Street.