A bar on Manhattan’s Upper East Side has promised to pick up customers’ drink tabs if the New York Knicks win Game 1 of the NBA Finals — while quietly hedging the promotion with a $5,000 bet in a prediction market.
Under the offer, all drinks served that night become free if the Knicks prevail. The bar’s hedge, a $5,000 “Knicks win” contract on a prediction market platform, is designed to pay out roughly enough to offset the cost of the free beverages. If the Knicks lose, the bar owes nothing to patrons and is only out the $5,000 wager.
Owner Freedman said the structure lets the bar run an aggressive promotion while keeping the downside limited. The bar effectively converts a potentially open-ended bar tab into a capped marketing cost.
A textbook example of hedging
Freedman’s strategy illustrates a straightforward case of hedging: taking an offsetting position in a related asset to reduce potential losses.
- if the Knicks win: the bar pays for customers’ drinks, but the prediction contract pays out, cushioning or fully covering that expense
- if the Knicks lose: there is no free-drink liability, and the bar simply loses the $5,000 hedge
This approach turns a high-visibility, high-risk offer into a more predictable expense. The key is that the hedge is closely linked to the outcome that drives the bar’s costs, creating a financial safety net.
Prediction markets surge on real-world events
Such hedging strategies are becoming more accessible as prediction markets move into the mainstream. Activity on leading platforms has grown sharply, offering more ways to trade on outcomes across sports, politics and macroeconomic events.
Combined monthly volume on Kalshi and Polymarket hit a record $28.4 billion in May, compared with less than $5 billion in September 2025. Total volume has already surpassed $60 billion in 2026, underscoring how quickly participation has expanded.
For businesses, this growth broadens the toolkit for risk management: promotions, event-driven campaigns and even revenue exposures can be paired with targeted contracts that pay out when specific scenarios occur.
Institutions turn bullish as retail stays cautious
The rise of prediction markets is unfolding against a backdrop of unusually mixed sentiment in traditional markets.
Bank of America’s May survey showed global fund managers making their largest-ever monthly rotation into equities. A net 50% are now overweight stocks, the highest reading since January 2022. Cash allocations dropped to 3.9%, and only 4% of respondents expect a “hard landing” for the economy.
That upbeat institutional stance contrasts with the mood of individuals. The American Association of Individual Investors survey for the week ending May 27 recorded bearish sentiment at 41.9%, above its long-term average of 31.0% for the 16th straight week. Bullish sentiment did tick up to 35.6%, but 71.9% of respondents said they believe the average consumer is worse off than at the start of the year.
Consumer confidence echoes that caution. A University of Michigan survey showed sentiment sinking to a record low in May, with inflation worries weighing on households even as financial markets rally.
Markets rally as fear gauge stays subdued
Despite the split in sentiment, major equity benchmarks have been strong. The tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 climbed to new highs by the end of May, delivering a year-to-date gain of more than 20%.
At the same time, the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), often described as the market’s “fear gauge,” has hovered near 16. Readings below 20 typically signal relatively calm conditions, suggesting that options markets are not pricing in significant near-term stress even as macro risks remain.
Bitcoin ETFs see outflows as volatility cools
Under the surface, more volatile corners of the market are seeing signs of adjustment by larger players.
U.S.-based spot Bitcoin ETFs, which had seen months of steady inflows, recorded more than $2.6 billion in outflows between mid and late May. The shift coincided with the asset’s expected 30-day volatility dropping to a nine-month low.
That combination — falling volatility and sizable ETF withdrawals — points to cooling demand and potential profit-taking by larger traders, even as Bitcoin’s price has stayed relatively stable. It also suggests appetite for high-beta exposure may be moderating, at least temporarily, after a strong run.
A broader shift toward risk management
From a New York bar hedging a finals promotion to large institutions adjusting exposure in Bitcoin and equities, the common thread is a growing focus on measured risk rather than outright speculation.
Online platforms now allow traders and businesses to express views or hedge outcomes across sports, markets and politics with increasing precision. As the Knicks tip off in the Finals, Freedman’s bar shows how tools once confined to Wall Street are being repurposed on Main Street — turning what looks like a bold bet into a tightly controlled risk.
Want to hedge event outcomes like this bar? Learn how with Toobit’s event contracts guide for smarter prediction trading.
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