Alvin Kan of Bitget Wallet suggests that the prediction market sector is entering a "Hub and Spoke" phase. While liquidity will naturally pool in a few massive, decentralized venues like Polymarket, the battle for the user will be won at the access layer—wallets, exchanges, and fintech apps.
Here is the strategic breakdown of why distribution is becoming more important than market creation, followed by the TDK metadata.
The Great Decoupling: Liquidity Pools vs. Access Interfaces
Executive Summary: Bitget Wallet is betting on a future where prediction markets are "invisible" back-end protocols. Instead of building its own exchange, Bitget is integrating existing liquid markets into its mobile interface. This strategy prioritizes User Experience (UX) and AI-assisted analysis, transforming raw on-chain probabilities into accessible insights for a mainstream audience.
The Strategy: Integration over Creation
Bitget Wallet has made a deliberate choice not to launch a proprietary prediction market. Alvin Kan highlights the "Liquidity Trap" that new entrants face:
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The Bootstrapping Problem: Building a new market requires immense time and capital to create deep liquidity. Without it, price discovery is poor, and participation stays low.
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The Integration Solution: By tapping into Polymarket’s existing infrastructure, Bitget provides its users with deep, diverse, and accurately priced markets from day one.
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The Trade-off: While Bitget loses control over listings and direct monetization of the market layer, it gains the ability to focus entirely on the "User Journey."
Simplifying the "Speculative Journey"
Prediction markets are inherently complex, requiring an understanding of binary outcomes and weighted probabilities. Bitget is using two primary tools to bridge this gap:
| Feature | Function | Benefit for User |
| Unified Mobile UI | Funding, signing, and execution in one app. | Removes the "multi-step" friction of native dApps. |
| AI-Assisted Analysis | Aggregates news, sentiment, and on-chain signals. | Translates raw percentages into structured "insights." |
| Self-Custody Access | Users maintain control of their own assets. | Provides access to protocols without Bitget acting as a custodian. |
Compliance at the Edge
The "decoupling" of the interface from the infrastructure provides a unique path for regulatory compliance:
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Self-Custodial Framework: As a wallet, Bitget does not hold user assets or operate the underlying markets.
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Geofencing & Information: Bitget manages access based on local laws, ensuring that users in restricted jurisdictions are informed of limitations.
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The Web3 Model: This reinforces the broader trend where the protocol layer remains neutral and global, while the access layer (the wallet) manages the localized legal and user experience requirements.
The Future: A Hybrid Ecosystem
Kan predicts a "Two-Tier" market structure for the late 2020s:
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The Core Hubs: Platforms like Polymarket will remain the primary centers for price discovery and "power users."
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The Distributed Spokes: Wallets and exchanges will become the "mass-market" entry points, where users engage with markets because their assets are already stored there.
In this model, prediction markets stop being "destinations" and start being "features" within a broader financial ecosystem.
