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Kalshi Secures $1 Billion As Prediction Markets Race Heats Up

A surge in capital puts Tarek Mansour’s platform in a tight contest to define event-based trading.

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kalshi secures $1 billion as prediction markets race heats up

Kalshi has raised $1 billion at an $11 billion valuation, a rapid step-up for the prediction-market operator founded by Lebanese entrepreneur Tarek Mansour. Paradigm led the round, joined by Sequoia Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, CapitalG and several returning investors. The deal lands barely weeks after a $300 million raise at half the valuation.

The cash gives Kalshi fresh weight in an industry moving from curiosity to infrastructure. The company’s profile grew during the 2024 US election cycle, yet most trading today comes from sports. A partnership with CNN is in the works. Kalshi is also building corporate hedging tools aimed at firms exposed to weather shocks or political stoppages — a pitch that pushes prediction markets toward more traditional risk desks.

kalshi prediction market investment

Competition is close. Polymarket is said to be raising at a valuation that could reach $15 billion, a sign that event-based trading is drawing mainstream capital rather than speculative fanfare. The shift is being watched in the Gulf, where demand for pricing tools linked to policy, climate and commodities has edged higher with broader economic reforms.

Mansour’s route into tech was anything but standard. Raised in Lebanon until age 17, he arrived in the US with little sense of Silicon Valley. “We had one shitty computer at home that barely worked,” he told Sourcery earlier this year. After studying engineering and maths at MIT, he worked in equity derivatives at Goldman Sachs and later traded macro at Citadel. At MIT he met co-founder Luana Lopes Lara, who shared a similar turn from academia into quantitative finance. “It was pretty inevitable we would try to build this together,” she told InGame.

Also Read: Aramco Installs Middle East’s First Industrial Quantum Computer

The pair launched Kalshi in 2018 and entered Y Combinator a year later. Early backing from YC, Sequoia, Charles Schwab and Henry Kravis helped turn a research interest into a regulated marketplace offering trades on outcomes across economics, entertainment, sports and weather.

With the new capital, Kalshi plans to scale its consumer markets, deepen ties with institutions and expand enterprise hedging products. The speed of its valuation rise shows how aggressively the sector is forming — and how little room there is for missteps as prediction platforms head toward the financial mainstream.

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DJI Teases Dual-Camera Osmo Pocket 4P For 2026 Launch

Though most technical claims for the new gimbal come from industry leaks rather than DJI’s own announcement.

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dji teases dual-camera osmo pocket 4p for 2026 launch
DJI

DJI has teased a dual-camera version of its Osmo Pocket gimbal, confirming that the Osmo Pocket 4P will launch in 2026. The teaser image is the company’s first preview of the device, following months of speculation about a more advanced model in its pocket camera range.

The image shows a slightly larger device than the existing Osmo Pocket 4, with two camera modules mounted above a compact three-axis gimbal. Reports suggest one camera may use a 1-inch sensor paired with a wide-angle lens, while the second may carry a 3x zoom lens — though DJI has not officially confirmed any of these details.

According to leaks circulating ahead of the launch, the Osmo Pocket 4P could support 4K video at up to 240 frames per second, offer 14 stops of dynamic range and include 10-bit D-Log color support. Those features are commonly used by filmmakers who require greater flexibility during color grading and post-production. Reports also point to Hasselblad color tuning, continuing a partnership that has already appeared in some of DJI’s drone cameras, along with up to 128GB of built-in storage that would reduce reliance on external memory cards during longer shoots.

Also Read: AltoVolo Releases Sigma Footage & Sets Date For Demonstrator

The device is expected to retain features from the existing Osmo Pocket 4, including a three-axis mechanical gimbal, updated ActiveTrack subject tracking and a flip-out touchscreen display. The Osmo Pocket line is aimed at content creators, vloggers, and independent filmmakers seeking compact equipment that can produce usable footage without a larger camera system.

DJI has not provided pricing or a specific launch date beyond the 2026 window. Industry observers expect the Osmo Pocket 4P to cost more than the standard Pocket 4 because of the dual-camera setup and expanded recording capabilities, though no figures have been disclosed. So far, most of the technical detail circulating around the product remains tied to leaks rather than official confirmation.

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