What Kalshi Wants to Do
Kalshi Inc. submitted a request to broaden its prediction platform, enabling users to wager on or insure against travel delays and cancellations. Currently, users can place bets on contracts linked to delay and cancellation counts at particular U.S. airports such as JFK in New York and O'Hare in Chicago.
As per the filing submitted on Tuesday, the contracts will determine payouts by calculating the precise percentage of flights that are canceled out of all scheduled takeoffs during a specific period at a designated airport. For settlement, the contracts will mainly use FlightAware data, with the Bureau of Transportation Statistics as a fallback.
"We certify markets all the time; this market isn't live. While this market has utility in hedging travel related risk, we're still evaluating it," Kalshi said in an email statement.
During last month's Bloomberg Market Structure Conference, Kalshi CEO and co-founder Tarek Mansour noted that residents of the Florida Keys had turned to the prediction platform rather than buying hurricane insurance.
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The Broader Appeal of Cancellation Contracts
If approved, these contracts would allow airlines, travel agencies, and even individual passengers to hedge against the risk of flight cancellations, which cost the industry billions annually. Kalshi's existing products already offer protection against broader delay and cancellation patterns, but the new contracts' focus on exact percentages provides finer-grained protection. This could appeal to frequent flyers and businesses with tight travel schedules. Moreover, the use of FlightAware as the primary data source ensures transparency, though the recent tampering incidents underscore the need for robust verification mechanisms.
Why the Timing Gets Tricky
This filing arrives at a time when prediction markets are being used more widely across various domains. But the industry's expansion also brings heightened worries about market manipulation. Earlier this month, after discovering users were manipulating rankings linked to prediction market wagers, Spotify Technology SA requested that both Kalshi and Polymarket confirm they have no official relationship with the streaming platform. In April, France's meteorological authority reported potential interference with weather sensors at its biggest airport, following detection of abnormal data coinciding with substantial betting activity on a Polymarket contract.
These incidents highlight the vulnerability of prediction markets to external interference. The reported manipulation on Spotify's platform and the tampering with weather sensors in France demonstrate that bad actors may attempt to influence outcomes. Kalshi's proposed contracts, if approved, would need robust safeguards to ensure data integrity and prevent similar abuses.
Kalshi's CEO has previously highlighted how prediction markets can serve as alternative hedging tools, such as when Florida Keys residents used the platform instead of hurricane insurance. The airline industry loses billions annually due to cancellations, making such contracts potentially valuable for airlines, travel agencies, and frequent flyers. However, the recent tampering incidents underscore the need for rigorous data verification to maintain market integrity.
What It Means for Your Portfolio
For now, this contract is just a filing. The market is not live yet.
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