Kalshi’s $22B Valuation Rests on a Legal Fight It Might Lose

What You Need to Know
- Kalshi generates $2 billion annualized revenue with $22 billion valuation despite unresolved legal status.
- Sports contracts represent 90% of Kalshi’s revenue while regulatory jurisdiction remains actively contested in courts.
- Multiple states sued Kalshi for unlicensed sports betting; case likely heading to Supreme Court.
- Kalshi captured $5.1 billion in weekly trading volume during World Cup opening, largest single-platform record.
Kalshi is in early talks with investment banks about a public listing, but the company generating $2 billion in annualized revenue and a $22 billion valuation is built almost entirely on a legal question that has not been answered yet.
The core tension is straightforward: sports contracts account for an estimated 90% of Kalshi’s revenue, and the regulatory ground beneath those contracts is actively contested. Kentucky filed suit against Kalshi and rival Polymarket this week, joining more than a dozen states including Ohio, Nevada, New Jersey, and New York that have brought similar actions alleging the platforms operate unlicensed sports betting. The CFTC has countered by suing New Mexico and asserting exclusive federal jurisdiction over event contracts, and a New Jersey court sided with Kalshi in April 2026, but the jurisdictional fight looks likely to reach the Supreme Court. Gaming industry groups are simultaneously lobbying to insert language into the CLARITY Act, a pending crypto market-structure bill, that would explicitly block sports prediction markets from operating under federal derivatives rules. That is not a peripheral threat to the IPO thesis. That is the IPO thesis.
The World Cup’s opening week alone pushed combined weekly spot volume across all prediction platforms to $8.7 billion, with Kalshi claiming $5.1 billion of that, the largest weekly total any single prediction platform has recorded.
That number illustrates both the opportunity and the exposure. Monthly trading volume reached $16.81 billion in May, up 13.5% from April, driven by the NBA playoffs and the FIFA World Cup. Institutional trading volume reportedly jumped 800% in the six months through early May, pushing annualized trading volume from $52 billion to $178 billion. Kalshi has raised $2.685 billion across five rounds since June 2025, with the most recent $1 billion round in May 2026 drawing Coatue, Sequoia, Andreessen Horowitz, Paradigm, Morgan Stanley, and ARK Invest. The plan to use those funds for institutional products targeting hedge funds, asset managers, and insurers makes sense if federal jurisdiction holds. It makes considerably less sense if the CFTC’s authority over sports event contracts gets stripped or narrowed by either Congress or the courts.
One structural detail from the early IPO conversations is worth attention: Kalshi is reportedly asking prospective bank advisers to integrate directly with its platform and offer institutional clients trading access. If that holds, the IPO roadshow becomes a client acquisition exercise, which is an unusual approach and signals that Kalshi sees the listing itself as a distribution event, not just a capital raise. A public offering would not happen before late 2027 or early 2028 at the earliest, which means the regulatory trajectory for prediction markets will need to resolve, or at least stabilize, before any S-1 makes sense to file.
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