{
  "type": "article",
  "title": "Zuckerberg Eyes the Betting Boom as Meta Quietly Tests a Points-Based Prediction Platform Called Arena",
  "summary": "Meta is experimenting with a prediction market platform known internally as 'Arena' that currently runs on points instead of real money, keeping it clear of gambling and derivatives rules.",
  "content": "Mark Zuckerberg is angling for a piece of one of the buzziest corners of crypto-adjacent finance. Meta is quietly experimenting with a prediction market platform known internally as 'Arena,' a move that would push the social media giant straight into the booming business of letting people bet on the outcome of real-world events.\n\nFor now, Arena runs on points instead of real money. That distinction matters: by avoiding cash settlement, the product sidesteps the gambling and derivatives rules that hem in cash-based venues such as Kalshi and Polymarket.\n\n \n\nNot Meta's first dance with crypto\nThis is hardly the company's first flirtation with crypto and Web3. Meta has orbited digital finance for years, from the collapse of its Diem stablecoin project to its enormous metaverse spending, and more recently a revived interest in stablecoins. A prediction market is arguably the logical next experiment, because Meta already owns the two assets these platforms burn years and fortunes chasing: billions of users and the social feeds where this style of betting naturally spreads. Wiring event markets into Instagram or Facebook would give Meta instant distribution that standalone apps struggle for years to build.\n\nEveryone wants in\nThe timing is telling. Schwab and Cboe are both planning their own prediction market products built around S&amp;P 500 contracts, and nearly every major crypto exchange either runs one or has partnered with one.\n\nBut the sector is also drawing regulatory fire. CME is suing the CFTC over whether perpetual futures and these products are being regulated correctly, a Michigan court has ruled that sports markets fall outside federal oversight, and an investigation uncovered $1.9 million in faked bets on Polymarket.\n\nMeta clearly has the user base to make Arena work. The open question is whether those users actually want to place predictions inside their social feeds, or would rather keep their markets and their socializing separate. The biggest names in prediction markets will be watching the answer very closely.\n\nMaelstrom's big bet on a trading-card token\nArthur Hayes' family office, Maelstrom, has rolled out a bullish pitch for $CARDS, the token powering Collector Crypt. Its conviction is striking: Maelstrom set a $4 price target by the end of summer, a 13x jump from current levels.\n\nCollector Crypt tokenizes graded trading cards on Solana, mostly Pokémon and now branching into sports. Physical cards go into insured custody and become tradable onchain with a single tap. At the heart of it are what the company calls gacha machines, essentially digital pack openings.\n\nHere is how the gacha model works: the company buys cards in bulk at a 5 to 15% discount, then users open packs and either keep what they pull or instantly sell it back at 7 to 15% below market. The setup is generally viewed as positive-sum, since users on average receive packs worth a touch more than they pay, while Collector Crypt keeps a blended margin near 5%, or roughly 4.4% net after incentives.\n\nThat thin-looking 4.4% net margin has produced eye-popping numbers: a whopping $54 million in annualized profit in May, tracking toward a $109 million run-rate in June, all built on a base of just about 800 daily active users. At a $500 million fully diluted valuation, which Maelstrom argues is closer to $325 million, Hayes considers the token cheap.\n\nThe bigger thesis is eBay disruption. Selling a Pokémon card on eBay can cost 16 to 20% once fees and shipping are tallied, whereas Collector Crypt charges 2%, settles instantly, and keeps the card in custody. Maelstrom's argument is that just as stablecoins reinvented payments and Hyperliquid reinvented trading by rebuilding a clunky web2 process onchain, Collector Crypt is doing the same for cards.\n\nIt is a persuasive case, though Maelstrom is not exactly early: CARDS has already climbed roughly 8x since April 1st. Questions still linger over how the team is funneling revenue back to the token, and until those are answered convincingly, skeptics will remain. The strength of Collector Crypt as a protocol, however, is hard to dispute.\n\nCatholic leaders open a new front against the CLARITY Act\nThe crypto industry's top legislative goal has just run into an unexpected adversary. A group of 82 Catholic leaders has warned that a central provision of the CLARITY Act, the market-structure bill the industry has lobbied hard to pass, could enable human trafficking.\n\nThe provision shields blockchain software developers from prosecution. The religious leaders argue that carving out that legal protection could let bad actors build and operate tools that move illicit funds with no accountability.\n\nCrypto advocates view developer protection as essential, contending that writing neutral code should not expose engineers to criminal liability for how others use it. The Catholic leaders are attacking from a moral direction instead, painting the same clause as a loophole that could shield the infrastructure behind trafficking and exploitation. That framing is far harder for politicians to dismiss than a routine industry-versus-regulator fight, and it hands fresh ammunition to the bill's opponents as the debate drags on.\n\nMoral opposition from a large faith coalition gives wavering lawmakers a reason to slow down or push for changes to the developer carve-out. It will not sink the bill by itself, but it broadens the coalition against it beyond the usual skeptics and forces the industry to defend one of its most cherished principles on unfamiliar turf. The odds of the CLARITY Act passing in 2026 have slid from around 75% to 43%, making it an underdog.\n\nMarkets at a glance\nCrypto majors are slightly green after a red start to the week. BTC is up 1% at $62.7k, ETH up 1% at $1,676, SOL up 1% at $70, and HYPE down 1% at $62. BEAT (+14%), JUP (+9%) and AAVE (+5%) led the top movers. Oil slipped 2% to $71.40 and Gold fell 2% to $4,060. Stock futures are modestly green following a heavy tech selloff, with the DOW flat and the Nasdaq up 0.3%.\n\nThe headlines moving crypto\n• Vitalik Buterin said the Ethereum Foundation will cut its budget by 40% in a major reset, announced the same day the foundation confirmed a 20% headcount reduction and the resignation of co-executive director Hsiao-Wei Wang, the ninth senior figure to leave since January.\n• BNY said FOMO is pushing asset managers into tokenized funds, with fund issuers exploring blockchain-based ETFs out of fear of missing an early foothold in tokenized finance.\n• Chainlink teamed up with 47 South Korean and European banks on an alliance called Project Pangea, which will use stablecoins to settle multimillion-dollar currency trades between the two regions in near real time.\n• BlackRock formally recommended a 1-2% Bitcoin allocation for investors' portfolios.\n• Brazil blocked political parties and candidates from accepting crypto donations.\n\nTreasuries, ETFs and tokens\n• The Bitcoin ETFs saw $114M in net outflows on Tuesday, while the ETH ETFs saw $82M in outflows and the HYPE ETFs took in $1.5M.\n• Meme leaders were red: DOGE -1%, SHIB flat, PEPE -3%, PENGU -2%, TRUMP -1%, BONK flat.\n• On Solana, CARDS (+15%), TCG (+20%) and Squire (+20%) led movers; on Base, DEGEN (+14%) and LBM (+20%) stood out.\n• DeFi TVL has fallen every month in 2026 and is now down 39% year to date to $70B.\n• An exploit in SecondFi, a Cardano project, may lead to $20M in losses.\n• NFT leaders were mostly flat: Punks even at 30.5 ETH, BAYC -1% at 9.1 ETH, Pudgy even at 4.65 ETH, and Hypurr's down 6% at 199 HYPE. Racerz (+315%) and Remnants (+23%) led the top movers.\n\nWhat this means for you\n• For crypto investors: BlackRock now formally suggests putting 1-2% of a portfolio into Bitcoin, a signal that mainstream money managers are treating BTC as a standard allocation.\n• For everyday users: If Meta builds prediction betting into Instagram and Facebook, event wagering could reach billions of people, though Arena currently uses points rather than real cash, so there is no money at stake yet.\n• For the industry: The CLARITY Act's odds of passing in 2026 have dropped from about 75% to 43%, meaning the regulatory clarity crypto firms want may be delayed.\n\nQuestions & Answers\n\n1. What is Meta's 'Arena'?\nIt is a prediction market platform Meta is testing internally, where users bet on real-world event outcomes using points rather than real money.\n\n2. Why does Arena use points instead of cash?\nRunning on points keeps it clear of the gambling and derivatives rules that govern cash-settled venues like Kalshi and Polymarket.\n\n3. What price target did Maelstrom set for the CARDS token?\nA $4 target by the end of summer, a 13x jump from current prices.\n\n4. How much profit is Collector Crypt making?\nIt posted $54 million in annualized profit in May and is tracking toward a $109 million run-rate in June, on about 800 daily active users.\n\n5. Why are Catholic leaders opposing the CLARITY Act?\n82 Catholic leaders warn that a provision shielding blockchain developers from prosecution could enable human trafficking by protecting tools that move illicit funds.\n\n6. What are the odds of the CLARITY Act passing in 2026?\nThey have fallen from around 75% to 43%, making it an underdog.\n\n7. What did BlackRock recommend?\nA formal 1-2% Bitcoin allocation for investors' portfolios.\n\n8. What is happening at the Ethereum Foundation?\nVitalik Buterin said it will cut its budget by 40%, the same day it confirmed a 20% headcount reduction and the resignation of co-executive director Hsiao-Wei Wang.",
  "url": "https://trendkia.com/en/business/zuckerberg-ki-najara-satta-bajara-para-meta-chupachapa-arena-nama-ka-pridikshana-pletaphorma-testa-kara-raha-2746",
  "category": "Business",
  "publishedAt": "2026-06-24",
  "tags": [
    "Meta prediction market",
    "Arena platform",
    "crypto news",
    "CARDS token",
    "CLARITY Act",
    "Mark Zuckerberg",
    "Collector Crypt"
  ],
  "language": "en",
  "site": "TrendKia"
}