Arkham has launched a new prediction markets analytics platform that lets users track top traders, monitor live positions, and analyze market activity across major event-contract platforms.
The feature expands Arkham’s blockchain intelligence platform into one of crypto’s fastest-growing sectors, as prediction markets continue to attract billions in trading volume and draw increased institutional attention.
In an announcement on X and on its official blog, Arkham said users can now view prediction-market traders ranked by profit and loss, inspect open and historical positions, monitor real-time trades, and analyze wallet activity connected to market participants.
Arkham highlighted trader “Theo4” in its announcement, claiming the account generated $22 million in lifetime profit and $14.4 million from the 2024 U.S. popular vote market.
The launch builds on Arkham’s existing blockchain analytics infrastructure, which tracks wallets, entities, token movements, and exchange activity across multiple chains.
According to Arkham, the platform now combines prediction-market trading data with its existing address-labeling system, allowing users to analyze how large traders behave across both event markets and broader crypto markets.
Arkham said its database contains more than 3.5 billion address labels and over 800,000 verified entities.
The platform includes trader leaderboards, profit metrics, return-on-investment tracking, win rates, and market-level dashboards showing Yes and No positions. Users can also set alerts for prediction-market activity tied to specific wallets or traders.
The company framed the product as a transparency tool for traders looking to identify successful market participants and follow capital flows across prediction markets.
Arkham’s launch comes as prediction markets continue gaining traction across crypto and traditional finance.
Kalshi recently announced a $1 billion Series F funding round at a reported $22 billion valuation, saying institutional trading volume increased 800% over the past six months while annualized volume climbed from $52 billion to $178 billion.
Meanwhile, platforms such as Polymarket have expanded beyond election markets into sports, macroeconomics, crypto, and geopolitical events.
The sector has also attracted growing regulatory scrutiny in the United States. Courts and regulators continue to debate whether event contracts should be classified as regulated financial derivatives or gambling products.
Against that backdrop, analytics and transparency tools are becoming increasingly important as trading volumes rise and larger market participants enter the sector.
Arkham’s expansion into prediction-market analytics is yet another signal that on-chain intelligence firms now view event-contract trading as a major part of the broader crypto trading ecosystem.


