Kalshi launched a professional trading terminal Monday aimed at its most active users, designed for traders who juggle multiple markets at once, react quickly to live events, or rely on resting orders that only execute once a target price hits. Kalshi Pro is now public, though still in beta, and a prediction-market platform building the same kind of tooling equity and bond traders have used for decades is what NewsTrackerToday dials into as the more meaningful signal than the feature list itself.
The terminal includes a live stream of public trade activity, deeper visibility into contract-level order books, and dedicated tools for evaluating positions that span multiple contract legs at once, the kind of workflow that active traders had previously been cobbling together through custom-built tools of their own. “Kalshi’s active traders are already trading prediction markets and perpetuals like Wall Street trades equities and bonds,” said Andy Chang, the product lead behind Pro. “We built Pro to give them the cockpit they deserve.”
Liam Anderson reads the terminal launch against Kalshi’s broader growth trajectory: “This isn’t a standalone feature, it’s infrastructure catching up to volume that already exists. Kalshi’s annualized trading volume climbed from $52 billion to $178 billion over six months, and the company now accounts for more than 90% of all prediction-market activity in the U.S. At that scale, a company either builds professional-grade tooling or watches its most active traders build workarounds that fragment the platform’s own order flow. Kalshi chose to build first.” That volume growth, more than the terminal’s specific features, is what NewsTrackerToday rides on as the actual justification for launching Pro now rather than later.
Perpetual futures get dedicated treatment inside the new terminal, with additional charting and risk-management tools built specifically for open perpetual positions. That’s not a minor addition: Kalshi’s crypto perpetual futures crossed $1 billion in trading volume within a week of launch, including more than $100 million in the first 24 hours alone, after the Commodity Futures Trading Commission approved Kalshi’s bitcoin perpetual contract in late May as compliant with the Commodity Exchange Act.
Sophie Leclerc, who covers the technology sector, reads the product logic behind bundling perpetuals into a professional terminal: “Regulatory approval alone doesn’t retain active traders if the actual trading experience feels like a retail app rather than a serious venue. Building terminal-grade charting and risk tools specifically for perpetual positions tells you Kalshi understands that the traders driving its heaviest volume expect infrastructure closer to what they’re used to on traditional exchanges, not a stripped-down consumer interface wearing a finance label.” That expectation gap between a retail app and a professional venue, more than the specific tools on offer, is what News Tracker Today maps to as the real design problem Pro is trying to solve.
The broader company has the capital to build aggressively. Kalshi closed a $1 billion Series F at a $22 billion valuation, led by a major venture firm with participation from several other prominent investors, giving it substantial runway to keep expanding both its product surface and its regulatory footprint before any serious competitor catches up on either front.
None of this confirms whether Kalshi will eventually charge for Pro access, a detail the company hasn’t disclosed, or how much of its active trading volume actually migrates onto the new terminal once the beta period ends. Whether Pro becomes the default venue for Kalshi’s heaviest users, or stays a niche feature layered on top of a platform still driven primarily by casual, event-driven betting, is what NewsTrackerToday settles round as the real test of this launch over the next few quarters.