Competition in the fast-growing prediction markets sector is shifting away from pure liquidity and toward control of the user interface, with digital wallets increasingly emerging as the key battleground for distribution and user access.
This is the core conclusion of a new 2026 outlook report published by crypto exchange Bitget, which argues that fragmentation across prediction market platforms is reshaping where long-term competitive advantage will be built.

Prediction Markets Hit Record Volumes
The report comes as prediction markets reach new highs in activity. Data from Dune Analytics shows daily trading volume surged to a record $814 million on January 21, placing the sector on track to surpass December’s $11.5 billion monthly volume record.
Despite this growth, liquidity remains spread across a fragmented ecosystem of platforms such as Kalshi, Polymarket, and the recently launched Opinion. Each platform operates largely in isolation, requiring users to navigate separate interfaces, data sets, and execution environments.
Why the Wallet Is Becoming the Distribution Layer
According to Bitget’s analysis, this fragmentation is driving a strategic shift. As market supply improves and liquidity deepens, competition is no longer focused on whether platforms can list enough events.
“Differentiation increasingly occurs at the interface layer — where users discover events, interpret probabilities, and execute trades,” the report notes.
Digital wallets are well positioned to become that interface. By aggregating event discovery, data visualization, and execution across multiple prediction market venues, wallets could function as a unified access point, reducing friction for users and consolidating fragmented demand.
In this model, the wallet evolves beyond a passive storage tool into an event-driven decision layer, where users analyze real-world outcomes, assess probabilities, and act financially without switching between platforms.
From Asset Container to Decision Interface
Bitget’s thesis aligns with broader industry thinking. Venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz has similarly argued that the next phase of prediction markets will depend on tighter integration with crypto-native infrastructure, including AI-powered analysis, identity verification, and richer data layers.
Rather than competing solely on liquidity pools or market listings, platforms that control the wallet interface may gain influence over user flow, discovery, and execution — similar to how trading terminals shaped traditional financial markets.
Strategic Implications for Brokers and Fintech Builders
For brokers, fintech developers, and infrastructure providers, the implication is clear. As prediction markets mature, the opportunity may no longer lie in building yet another standalone exchange.
Instead, competitive advantage is likely to accrue to those that create the most effective “front door” — a wallet-based interface that intelligently connects users to multiple prediction markets through a single workflow.
As prediction markets move closer to the financial mainstream, wallets may become the primary point where liquidity, data, and user intent converge.

