Wealthsimple Predict app to launch with 4,000 event markets targeting 4M users
Key Takeaways
- Wealthsimple’s new Predict app illustrates a lean product launch by integrating Kalshi’s exchange API, avoiding the heavy infrastructure lift.
- The move adds a sticky new vertical to its fintech suite and tests consumer appetite for event-based trading as a SaaS-like add-on.
Mentioned
Key Intelligence
Key Facts
- 1Wealthsimple has 4 million Canadian customers and $125 billion in assets under administration.
- 2Wealthsimple Predict will launch in summer 2026, offering betting on over 4,000 events in economic, financial, and climate categories.
- 3Contracts will be priced under $1, with payouts determined by market sentiment.
- 4The app is built on Kalshi, a U.S.-regulated prediction market exchange, marking a partnership rather than an in-house build.
- 5Interactive Brokers was previously the only legal prediction market avenue in Canada via ForecastEx; Polymarket is banned in Ontario.
- 6Swapnil Parikh, Wealthsimple VP of Investing Products, stated that after months of dialogue, no regulator has prohibited the offering.
Wealthsimple
Company- Founded
- 2014
- Employees
- 800+
Canadian fintech offering investing, crypto, cash, and tax products to 4M users with $125B AUA.
| Platform | ||
|---|---|---|
| Wealthsimple Predict | Via Kalshi exchange | Pending (dialogue with regulators) |
| Interactive Brokers | ForecastEx integrated | Approved |
| Polymarket | Crypto-based, decentralized | Banned in Ontario |
| Crypto.com | In-app prediction trading | Operational (provincial variance) |
Analysis
For SaaS and product leaders, Wealthsimple Predict is a case study in rapid market entry: leveraging a third-party regulated exchange to deliver a new asset class without building the core engine. This modular approach accelerates time-to-market and reduces compliance overhead, while the 4M-user base provides immediate distribution. The question is whether prediction markets can reach SaaS-level engagement metrics or remain a novelty layer.
Wealthsimple, the Canadian fintech with 4 million users and $125 billion in assets under administration, announced on June 18, 2026, that it will launch a new standalone app—Wealthsimple Predict—offering retail prediction market trading in partnership with U.S.-based Kalshi. The app, set for a beta release shortly and a full summer launch, will give users the ability to bet on the outcome of over 4,000 events spanning economic indicators, financial moves, and climate phenomena. Contracts will be priced under $1, with payouts determined by market consensus, effectively turning sentiment into a tradable asset class for everyday investors.
Contracts will be priced under $1, with payouts determined by market consensus, effectively turning sentiment into a tradable asset class for everyday investors.
The move thrusts Wealthsimple into a rapidly growing but regulatory gray area. Prediction markets have surged globally, driven by platforms like Polymarket and Crypto.com on the crypto-native side, and by regulated exchanges such as Kalshi and ForecastEx in the U.S. In Canada, Interactive Brokers was previously the only legal avenue for such trading via ForecastEx, while Polymarket was banned in Ontario by the Ontario Securities Commission for operating without registration. Parikh noted that after months of dialogue, no provincial regulator has explicitly prohibited the offering, suggesting Wealthsimple Predict will operate within existing frameworks. This regulatory needle-threading positions Wealthsimple to capture early-mover advantage in the Canadian market and potentially set a precedent for how licensed fintechs can bring novel financial products to mass audiences.
The announcement underscores Wealthsimple’s ambition to evolve beyond self-directed stock and crypto trading into a broader financial ecosystem. The Predict app complements its existing Trade, Crypto, Cash, and Tax products, creating a more sticky platform and cross-selling opportunities. By integrating with Kalshi’s infrastructure, Wealthsimple avoids the burden of building a prediction market engine from scratch, using a modular, API-driven approach that could serve as a template for future rapid feature launches. The choice of Kalshi—a CFTC-regulated exchange—also signals a preference for compliance over the decentralized ethos of Polymarket, which may appeal to risk-averse Canadian investors.
For the broader prediction market industry, Wealthsimple’s entrance could dramatically increase mainstream adoption. With 4 million users, many of whom are millennials and Gen Z already comfortable with app-based investing, the addressable market expands overnight. Parikh admitted demand is unproven, but global interest in event-based trading has been validated by Polymarket’s billions in volume during the 2024 U.S. election cycle and the growing appetite for alternative data and real-time sentiment products. In Canada, where betting on interest rate decisions or weather patterns is familiar through informal pools and regulated sports betting, the leap to formalized prediction contracts is culturally digestible.
What to Watch
Competitive dynamics will be shaped by Wealthsimple’s brand trust and distribution. Interactive Brokers’ prediction offering has remained relatively niche, and Polymarket’s Ontario ban limits its reach. Wealthsimple can leverage its marketing muscle, seamless onboarding, and the halo of a trusted brand to convert existing customers. However, execution risk remains: educational burden, potential blowback from gambling-like associations, and the lack of a secondary market for these contracts could dampen user engagement. Parikh hinted at cautious rollout—4,000 event categories, no sports or entertainment—to keep the product within a responsible trading perimeter.
Looking ahead, the launch could trigger a domino effect. Regulators may formalize guidelines, possibly opening the door for more fintechs. If Wealthsimple Predict succeeds, expect other banks and brokerages to seek similar partnerships or build in-house solutions. For Kalshi, the deal represents a major white-label win, validating its exchange model and potentially leading to additional overseas partnerships. For Canadian investors, it marks a new frontier where speculation on macro events becomes as accessible as buying a stock or ETF. The true test will be whether prediction market trading can sustain user interest beyond novelty and deliver the kind of engagement Wealthsimple needs to justify further product diversification.
How we covered this story
Every story in our saas coverage is assembled from multiple primary sources, cross-referenced for factual consistency, and scored along three independent dimensions: sentiment, operational impact, and source-cluster confidence. Single-source rumors and unverifiable claims do not pass our editorial gate. When a story shows "Verified by N sources" with N≥2, the development is independently corroborated; when N=1, we mark it explicitly so readers can weigh the signal accordingly.
Impact scoring uses a 1-10 scale weighted toward regulatory, financial, and operational consequence rather than coverage volume. A topic that runs in every outlet but moves no real decisions ranks lower than a niche regulatory filing that reshapes how operators in the saas space have to behave. Read our full methodology for the scoring rubric, our glossary for term definitions, and our trends index for the longitudinal view across the beat.
| Signal on this page | What it tells you |
|---|---|
| Verified by N sources | Independent corroboration count. N≥2 is our confidence floor; N=1 is marked explicitly. |
| Impact score (1-10) | Regulatory + financial + operational weight. 8+ signals an experienced-operator action item. |
| Sentiment | Five-tier classification trained on labeled saas-specific corpora. |
| Timeline | Where applicable, the related-events sequence that contextualizes today's development. |