Kalshi and Polymarket chiefs endorse 5(c) Capital’s new vehicle
Executives from two of the most prominent prediction market platforms, Kalshi and Polymarket, are backing a newly launched $35 million fund from specialist investment firm 5(c) Capital. The move underscores rising institutional confidence in prediction markets as a legitimate asset class and data source for forecasting real‑world events.
The fund, described as a dedicated prediction markets and event‑driven strategy vehicle, aims to deploy capital across both regulated and crypto‑native platforms. By aligning with industry operators, 5(c) Capital is positioning itself at the intersection of traditional finance, derivatives trading, and on‑chain decentralized finance (DeFi).
Institutional thesis around event‑driven trading
Prediction markets allow traders to buy and sell contracts tied to the outcome of specific events, such as elections, macroeconomic releases, or technology milestones. Prices on these platforms effectively encode the crowd’s implied probability of a given outcome, turning them into a real‑time sentiment and market intelligence tool.
By raising a dedicated fund, 5(c) Capital is betting that professionally managed strategies can extract consistent returns from pricing inefficiencies, liquidity gaps, and misaligned probabilities in these markets. The support of the Kalshi and Polymarket leadership signals that core industry stakeholders see room for deeper institutional participation without undermining the platforms’ retail user bases.
Regulation, crypto, and the future of forecasting markets
Kalshi operates as a U.S.‑regulated event‑contracts exchange, while Polymarket runs a crypto‑native platform that has become a bellwether for on‑chain sentiment. Backing from their chiefs gives 5(c) Capital a strategic vantage point across both regulated and blockchain‑based ecosystems, where questions around compliance, market integrity, and liquidity remain central.
Industry observers say the new fund could accelerate the maturation of prediction markets by bringing in professional risk management, more stable capital, and tighter links to institutional investors. If successful, the strategy may also help establish event‑driven contracts as a mainstream tool for hedging, speculation, and real‑time probability forecasting across politics, economics, and technology.

