Original author: mikey, 1kx analyst

Original translation: Luffy, Foresight News

There are many new builders in the prediction market, so it is necessary to have a comprehensive overview of this vertical. This article will briefly summarize the prediction market categories, GTM (go-to-market) strategies, product updates, mechanisms, and current development directions.

GTM

There are roughly two approaches to prediction market GTMs: non-sports and sports. The former is a relatively unexplored field that includes several target areas: cryptocurrencies, politics, cultural events. Polymarket is the clear leader in the non-sports field, with its GTMs focusing primarily on political events.

If you compare the trading volume of sports-focused prediction markets so far this year, you’ll find that Azuro and SX Network are even further behind Polymarket.

New competitors include Limitless on EVM (some of which support ETH trading), and Hedgehog on Solana. There are also competitors that have not yet launched, including: Drift Exchange, xMarkets, Inertia Social, Doxa, and Contro.

New players generally focus on two common themes:

  • Permissionless Markets: Open Market Creation and Incentive Layers

  • Solution: Rely on artificial intelligence for market settlement, or create a more efficient system

This is exactly what Polymarket users have been waiting for.

Given the popularity and regularity of sports prediction markets, they have obvious appeal in Web2. It is difficult to get users to move to Web3 because most users value brand and user experience. In addition, Web2 sports betting has an advantage in marketing funds, with at least 5 sports betting companies spending more than $100 million per year.

Americans bet 10 times more on the Super Bowl alone (about $23 billion) than on the cryptocurrency prediction market as a whole (about $2 billion). Even a single state bets well over $2 billion.

More on-chain money = more on-chain sports betting, just like internet bookmakers are dominated by mobile devices. One of the limiting factors in prediction markets is lack of money. On the non-sports side, LogX will support the TRUMP perpetual product, similar to FTX in 2020. Doxa is also working on lev. The counterparties for both projects are liquidity pools. Liquidations and bad debts are potential issues.

I hope Polymarket explores multiple betting models more. Technically, the "Trump and Biden win the nomination" market is a leveraged bet because it requires guessing two different events.

I would love to see a market like “will a, b, c, and d happen?” I don’t think initial liquidity will be an issue and LPs won’t miss such an opportunity.

In the sports prediction market, several protocols already allow leverage through so-called parlays, where users win prizes only when they correctly guess multiple unrelated events. SX Bet, Azuro and Overtime already support this functionality.

mechanism

There are roughly two types of working mechanisms for prediction markets: Web2.5 and Web3. The Web2.5 model usually uses cryptocurrency as a payment channel, such as Stake/Rollbit. Users can bet with cryptocurrency, but the counterparty is the team behind the application, and the product interacts on the chain.

Part of the product logic of the Web3 model will be placed on the chain, whether it is an NFT position or a bet executed through a smart contract. There are usually two ways to match on-chain bets, either an AMM that relies on passive LPs, or the platform acts as an order book for the exchange.

In Web3, Memecoins have become prediction markets in themselves, with $TRUMP and $BODEN being typical examples, and holders can benefit from two aspects: 1) being in the right direction; 2) attracting attention. Memecoins allow you to speculate on other people’s speculative behavior, whether you are right or wrong.

A new protocol called Swaye attempts to combine the advantages of prediction markets and Memecoins, where early entrants not only bet on specific outcomes, but also have an incentive to attract attention, as betting activity on either side helps increase P profit and loss.

Profit Model

How do prediction market protocols make money? There are several ways:

  • Transaction Fees

  • A portion of trader profits (Web2 model follows this path)

  • Counterparty Profit and Loss (Web2 prefers to serve clients who lose money)

Most protocols use either Method 1 or Method 3 . Polymarket currently does not charge any fees.

Next step

What’s next? AI agents are the next big opportunity in prediction markets because they can react quickly to news. They are able to manage orders and place bets, they can also calculate the expected value of an outcome and take calculated risks. Several teams are working in this area.

In the next few years, at least 1 protocol will compete head-on with Polymarket for volume. Given how much Polymarket currently incentivizes its markets, competitors will likely need to use incentives like points, tokens, or USDC heavily.

Everyone is asking if trading volumes can be sustained after the US election, and so far, non-election volumes on Polymarket have remained stable since the beginning of the year.