U.S.-regulated prediction market Kalshi has partnered with luxury watch marketplace Bezel to launch Watch Futures, enabling bets on future prices, discontinuations, and launches of high-end timepieces like Rolex and Patek Philippe models. Using Bezel's Beztimate engine for real-time valuations, the platform—priced from $1 per contract—expands into collectibles amid regulatory scrutiny and ties into events like Watches and Wonders.
Kalshi, a U.S.-regulated prediction market platform founded in 2018 by MIT graduates and valued at $11 billion, announced on March 3, 2026, a partnership with Bezel—a premium authenticated marketplace for brands like Rolex, Audemars Piguet, Patek Philippe, and Cartier, backed by celebrities including Kevin Hart, J Balvin, and Kyle Kuzma, and founded by Quaid Walker, Chase Pion, and Darryl Johnson—to launch Watch Futures.
This service allows users to trade event contracts on outcomes such as price thresholds for models like the Rolex Submariner or GMT-Master II, potential discontinuations, and upcoming launches. Contracts, accessible in the 'Culture' section of Kalshi's app and website starting at $1, reference Bezel's proprietary Beztimate system, which aggregates real-time transactions, bids, verified sales, market offers, and intelligence for independent valuation models and 'mathematical consensus' pricing.
The launch coincides with the Watches and Wonders event, where new model announcements could boost activity. Bezel's CEO Quaid Walker noted, 'Watches have been viewed as a financial market for a really long period of time, but it’s also passion-driven... This broadens the watch market and brings more folks into the hobby.' The platform enables enthusiasts and collectors—who may not afford six-figure watches—to participate without physical ownership, and owners to hedge against value declines by betting on price drops, with real-time monitoring of wagers and collections.
This follows Kalshi's expansions into sneakers and trading cards via StockX, and a recent Tradeweb partnership for data streaming. It reflects broader prediction market trends into niche assets, spotlighted in collector communities and events like Dubai Watch Week. However, challenges persist: U.S. states challenge sports contracts as gambling, the CFTC oversees federally, and manipulation concerns arose with Polymarket's high-volume geopolitical contracts. Bezel rejected 38% of submitted watches in late 2025, underscoring data quality needs.