Jump Trading has doubled its dedicated prediction markets team this year, as the high-frequency trading firm increases its exposure to one of the fastest-growing corners of event-based trading.
Prediction market volumes topped $50 billion in June, drawing increasing participation from institutional trading firms.
For Jump, the opportunity is large enough to justify a different kind of hiring strategy as prediction markets combine quantitative models with fast interpretation of real-world events.
Why Dorm-Room Traders Matter
Simon Johansen, Jump’s head of prediction markets, told Bloomberg that the firm is recruiting people outside its usual elite quant pipeline, including traders operating from dorm rooms and former accountants with a strong interest in sports betting.
Prediction markets often depend on events where historical data is limited or structurally incomplete. A World Cup, for example, happens only once every four years. That makes it harder to rely on the kind of deep historical datasets used in equities, futures or FX.
“It’s a bit less data-reliant in terms of how you build and train a model,” Johansen said. “It’s a bit more heavily weighted on real-time data and feedback of what you’re actually seeing on the field.”
Johansen said the firm is looking for people who understand the events being traded as well as the market itself. That broadens the traditional quant profile used for many other asset classes.
What Brokers Should Watch
Jump’s hiring suggests that expertise in prediction markets is becoming a specialised trading skill rather than an extension of traditional quantitative finance.
Johansen’s emphasis on real-time judgment alongside modelling reflects the different characteristics of event contracts, where historical datasets are often limited and outcomes depend on fast-changing information.
The shift also reinforces the broader institutionalisation of the sector. Jump already provides liquidity on Kalshi and Polymarket, and its expansion comes as exchanges, brokers and market makers invest more heavily in event-driven trading infrastructure.
As institutional participation grows, demand for professional execution, market data and risk tools is likely to grow alongside it.
This article was written by Tanya Chepkova at www.financemagnates.com.
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