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Saturday, March 28, 2026

Kalshi Moves Into Margin Trading With New Regulatory Approval

Kalshi won regulatory approval that paves the way for margin trading, giving the market prediction platform a product that could make it more attractive to speculative and other institutional investors as the sector attracts larger funds to traditional finance.

The approval covers a futures commission dealer license through its subsidiary Kinetic Markets LLC, according to a March 24 filing by the National Futures Association. Kalshi CEO Tarek Mansour said this week that a margin product would be available soon and described capital efficiency for institutions as a key priority.

The move comes just after Kalshi raised more than $1 billion in a funding round that valued the company at $22 billion, roughly double its reported valuation of $11 billion in December. The new valuation reflects investors’ belief that forecast markets are evolving from a novelty for retail trading to a broader trading and hedging venue with real appeal to Wall Street firms.

This growth has been rapid. Bloomberg reported that weekly domestic volume on Kalshi surpassed $3 billion earlier this month, while another report from Barron’s says the company recently reached $10.4 billion in monthly trading volume. March Madness has become the platform’s most popular category, even as the NCAA works to end betting on college sports through prediction markets.

Kalshi also builds the plumbing needed to serve larger traders. Recent reports show that major brokers are moving to give hedge funds access to Kalshi’s markets, while the company has partnered with FIS on clearing infrastructure aimed at institutional adoption and with Tradeweb to distribute forecast market data to professional investors.

This month, top U.S. exchange executives called for clearer rules as forecast markets add users and expand to contracts related to politics, economics, sports and geopolitics. Cboe also announced plans to launch more advanced forecast market contracts with partial payouts, demonstrating that established exchange groups are increasingly viewing event-driven trading as a real growth area rather than a fringe product.

Kalshi recently said it would block politicians, athletes, arbitrators and others with direct influence on certain exchange-related market outcomes, and California on Friday banned state officials from using insider knowledge to bet on prediction platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket. A bipartisan bill introduced this week would also ban contracts related to sporting events in federally regulated markets, underscoring that the industry’s next phase of growth will likely come with more onerous compliance requirements.

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