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Brazil is fighting a full-blown retail gambling epidemic. Kalshi just launched its first international product there. The timing isn’t a coincidence. It’s a business decision. And the tension between those two facts is going to define whether prediction markets survive their own global expansion.
Let’s be real. When you imagine a CFTC-regulated prediction market platform picking its first foreign market, you think London. Singapore. Maybe Dubai. You don’t think Brazil.
But that instinct is wrong, and here’s why.
Kalshi didn’t pick Brazil because of some cultural affinity for binary event speculation. They picked it because XP International already has 4.76 million active clients, R$1.491 trillion in client assets, and 18,000 financial advisors sitting on top of those accounts ready to pitch a “new asset class.” The company’s own cofounder said the quiet part out loud: international partners already have “the customers” and “the brand.”
That’s not a vision statement. That’s a distribution strategy dressed up as one.
The initial contracts are macro-first. IPCA inflation prints. Selic rate decisions. The kind of thing an existing brokerage client with an international account already thinks about. At face value, it looks clean. Kalshi is framing this as a federally regulated derivative under CFTC oversight, not a sportsbook. And if it stays at that level, the argument holds some water.
It won’t stay at that level.
Here’s the thing about Brazil in 2025 and 2026. The government wasn’t building anti-gambling infrastructure because things were fine.
The Health Ministry launched a betting health observatory. They trained 20,000 professionals for tele-mental-health support. This isn’t bureaucratic noise. This is a government that watched retail speculation eat a significant portion of its population and responded with actual infrastructure to contain the damage.
Kalshi walked into that market with a press release calling its product a “new asset class.”

Prediction markets love the intellectual framing. Vitalik Buterin’s “info finance” thesis. The idea that contract prices aggregate dispersed knowledge into useful probability signals. It sounds rigorous. Honestly, in narrow contexts it can even be true.
But the user economics underneath that framing are brutal, and the data isn’t soft.
That’s not a financial instrument with a learning curve. That’s a structure where retail participants are, in practice, exit liquidity for sophisticated market makers sitting on the other side of every contract. The “info finance” narrative is real at the macro level. At the individual user level, it describes a transfer of wealth from the many to the few at a rate that would make most casino operators blush.
Brazil’s regulators didn’t build a national self-exclusion system because that dynamic sounded unfamiliar to them.
Look. Kalshi has not announced Brazilian election contracts. They haven’t announced World Cup contracts either. The official product language is macro. That’s true.
But the brokerage infrastructure now exists. The distribution partner has nearly five million clients. The product category has already proven, repeatedly, that event contract volume can scale extremely fast when the public perceives an outcome as genuinely uncertain.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup runs June 11 through July 19. Brazil’s general election is October 4, with a potential runoff on October 25. Kalshi’s first foreign market is now live in the single most saturated year possible for exactly the kind of binary, headline-driven, high-stakes events that prediction platforms typically monetize hardest.
Whether they expand the Brazilian contract menu toward those events is a product decision, not a predetermined outcome. But the surrounding conditions make the “we’re just doing inflation contracts” framing increasingly fragile the longer the year goes on.

The bull case here is coherent. Brazil’s macro environment in early 2026 is genuinely tradable in binary form. The Selic rate debate, the IPCA trajectory, the GDP growth expectations sitting at 1.82% in the March Focus survey. There’s real informational value in those contracts for sophisticated investors thinking in portfolio terms. Wrapped in a brokerage interface, distributed to clients who already navigate international markets, it looks like structured macro exposure.
The bear case is that the brokerage wrapper doesn’t provide permanent insulation.
Kalshi is betting that three things, brokerage distribution, a macro-first frame, and a CFTC backstory, are enough to keep the product in a different legal and cultural category than what Brazil is already fighting. Brazil’s own government infrastructure is built on the explicit premise that this category distinction breaks down at scale in practice.
One of those positions is right. By the end of 2026, Brazil will have answered the question.
If you’re tracking prediction market tokens, adjacent DeFi protocols, or anything in the Polymarket ecosystem, this launch is worth watching closely. Not because it’s bullish. Because it’s a stress test.
Pro-Tip: If you’re a trader watching this space, the real signal to track isn’t the launch announcement. It’s whether Kalshi’s Brazilian contract menu expands beyond macro into event-driven categories before October. That expansion, if it happens, is the moment the “regulated derivative” framing gets tested by regulators who have already spent a year building the infrastructure to counter exactly that product category. Position accordingly.
References & Sources:
Kalshi is a regulated financial exchange that allows users to trade on the outcome of real-world events, essentially functioning as a prediction market. Its recent expansion into Brazil is highly controversial because the country is currently grappling with a severe sports betting and online gambling addiction crisis. Critics argue that introducing a new platform for speculative wagering could exacerbate these societal issues, even if Kalshi frames its event contracts as financial investments rather than traditional gambling.
Brazil is facing a rapidly growing gambling epidemic, largely fueled by the recent legalization and explosive popularity of online sports betting platforms, known locally as “Bets.” Millions of Brazilians are reportedly spending significant portions of their income on online gambling, leading to increased household debt, financial instability among lower-income families, and a surge in gambling-related mental health issues. The situation has prompted the government to urgently step in with stricter regulations to curb the economic and social fallout.
The classification of prediction markets like Kalshi is a subject of ongoing global debate. In the U.S., Kalshi operates under the regulatory framework of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), officially positioning its event contracts as financial derivatives. However, from a consumer perspective—especially in a country like Brazil that is highly sensitive to betting addiction—the mechanics of placing money on unpredictable outcomes closely mirror gambling behaviors and can trigger the exact same psychological responses and addictive loops.
In response to the betting addiction crisis, the Brazilian government is implementing a comprehensive regulatory framework to oversee the online gambling and betting industry. This includes mandating local operating licenses, imposing heavy taxes on both operators and winnings, banning the use of credit cards to fund betting accounts, and severely restricting advertising to protect vulnerable populations. Any prediction platform entering this space will need to navigate these stringent new regulations aimed at prioritizing consumer protection and mitigating gambling harm.
Expert in Digital Marketing and Cryptocurrency News with a BSc (Hons) in Marketing Management. With over 06 Years of experience in the blockchain space, Themiya provides in-depth analysis and technical insights for Coinsbeat.