メタ予測市場アプリのプッシュにより、Polymarket モデルがビッグテックの注目を集める
TL;DR Meta is reportedly building a standalone prediction market app internally called Arena. The product is expected to start with points rather than real-money wagering. The move pushes the prediction-market model further into mainstream tech, even as regulators keep watching the sector. Meta Moves Toward Event Trading Meta is reportedly working on a standalone prediction markets app, a move that would pull one of crypto’s most closely watched consumer trading models into the orbit of Big Tech. The app, internally known as Arena, is expected to resemble platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi, although early versions are reportedly designed around points rather than real-money betting. The key point is not simply that Meta may launch another experimental app. It is that prediction markets have become visible enough for one of the world’s largest social platforms to test the format directly. Crypto-native platforms helped normalize the idea of trading around future events, from elections and sports to macroeconomic outcomes. Meta entering the conversation gives that model a much wider consumer distribution question. Why Crypto Traders Are Watching For Polymarket, Kalshi and related platforms, the story cuts both ways. On one hand, Meta’s interest validates the broader idea that event-based trading and forecasting can become mainstream consumer behavior. On the other hand, Meta has the user base, product infrastructure and advertising reach to compete aggressively if it finds a legal structure that works. The points-based approach appears designed to reduce immediate gambling-law exposure while the company tests whether users will engage with event forecasts. That matters because prediction markets sit in a difficult regulatory zone between derivatives, gambling, information markets and social engagement products. A points version may be easier to launch, but it could still bring scrutiny if Meta later explores real-money mechanics. Prediction Markets Move Beyond Crypto The broader takeaway is that prediction markets are no longer just a crypto sidebar. Traditional brokers, exchanges and fintech platforms are experimenting with yes-or-no contracts, event derivatives and forecast-style products. Meta’s reported Arena project suggests consumer technology companies are now studying the same behavior pattern. For crypto, that raises an important question: whether the sector’s early lead in open, internet-native event markets can survive once larger platforms copy the interface while avoiding the token layer. If Meta proves there is mass demand for prediction-style engagement, crypto-native markets may benefit from the attention. But they may also face bigger competitors and a more crowded regulatory debate. This coverage is based on information from Reuters . This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae . This report is based on information from Reuters, available at Reuters