Kalshi is teaming up with Brazilian investment giant XP Inc. in its first international expansion outside the United States. The partnership aims to bring regulated event trading to XP clients, starting with Brazil’s growing market for alternative investments and macro bets.
What Kalshi and XP Are Building Together
In the U.S., Kalshi maintains a licensed event-trading exchange where customers trade contracts on real-world events, such as changes in interest rates or inflation statistics. XP is one of Brazil’s biggest brokerage and investing platforms. It has millions of individual and institutional clients all around the country. They intend to add Kalshi-style event markets to XP’s product portfolio, as per a Monday Bloomberg report.
In practice, XP will handle local distribution, client relationships, and regulatory work in Brazil. Kalshi will supply the event‑trading technology, market design, and risk‑management tools behind the scenes. The goal is to let XP users trade on clearly defined outcomes using a structure that looks and feels like any other regulated derivatives product.
Why Kalshi Is Moving Into Brazil First
Brazil has a large, active retail investor base and a strong culture of trading interest‑rate and macro products. That makes it a natural test bed for event contracts tied to economic data, politics, and commodities. It also has a relatively mature regulatory environment for derivatives compared with many other emerging markets.
Kalshi’s move into Brazil also reflects a bigger trend. Many investors want ways to trade views on specific outcomes without using complex options or futures. Event contracts can provide that exposure in a more direct way. By partnering with XP instead of going it alone, Kalshi can tap into an existing user base and local trust, rather than trying to build everything from scratch.
For XP clients, the partnership should eventually mean new market segments that sit somewhere between sports betting and traditional derivatives. Instead of guessing a coin price, they can trade on whether an official data print will land above or below a set line.
For Kalshi, a successful rollout in Brazil would demonstrate that regulated event trading can extend beyond its U.S. home. If volumes grow and regulators stay comfortable, similar deals in other regions become more likely. As with any new derivatives product, the real test will be how clearly the contracts are defined and how transparent the risk controls look to both users and supervisors.
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