By Telis Demos 

Founders of political wagering site Intrade are back with a new forum for electoral prognosticating, minus one big thing: the wagering.

Pivit, a web and mobile application, is launching prediction markets this week for the midterm U.S. elections.

The app is the product of Binary Event Network Inc., a company founded by Gregory DePetris and John McNamara, who created the first iteration of Intrade in 1999, and with Jason Finch, who also worked at Intrade in its early days.

Intrade involved buying and selling investment contracts tied to events like elections. But the once-popular site closed its market in 2013 after regulatory pressure on online gambling and when it found what it called "financial irregularities."

Pivit's contracts are based in percentages, not dollars. Participating doesn't require any money or pay out any rewards. Instead, the new market aims to attract people with rankings of the best predictors.

"We're essentially taking everything we learned and applying it to Pivit, " said Mr. DePetris, chief executive of Binary Event Network.

Some academics argue that harnessing thousands or millions of individual opinions can produce more accurate predictions than experts, polls and computer models, an effect known as "the wisdom of crowds." Companies such as Microsoft Corp., as well as U.S. intelligence agencies, have funded research into prediction markets, which may be useful for forecasting customer and market behavior.

Now defunct, Intrade was at one point one of the most widely cited political-prediction marketplaces. During the 2012 election, related contracts represented over $200 million worth of wagers, Intrade said at the time.

Many of the founders had left the company by 2006, as Intrade, which was based in Dublin, faced increasing U.S. regulatory pressure. Regulators declared political-event contracts a form of gambling around the same time that lawmakers barred U.S. banks from dealing with online gambling operators in other countries.

The market suffered from other problems. In 2011, its chief executive, John Delaney, died while climbing Mount Everest. During the 2012 election, Intrade acknowledged that some participants were making outsize bets on presidential-election contracts that may have distorted the market. Then in 2013, the market stopped trading after the company said it found financial irregularities.

Pivit, the new app, avoids some problems Intrade faced by taking money out of the equation.

Researchers say that nonmonetary incentives can bring people into a market, but doing so could still prove more difficult.

"It's an obstacle. A lot of markets have offered play money and people haven't shown up," said Robin Hanson, associate professor of economics at George Mason University, who has studied prediction markets.

David Rothschild, an economist at Microsoft Corp.'s Microsoft Research, who has studied Intrade, pointed to the success of social media such as Twitter Inc. and Facebook Inc., which offered no monetary incentive to participate and drew millions of users. "There are ways to work with incentives to make people treat it almost as real as money and to be honest in their opinions," he said.

Pivit will set initial percentages for individual events--a measure of how likely they are--by using a mix of polls and other factors, determined by a complex algorithm. Like a stock market, the percentages will move rapidly-- up to 10 times a second--based on people's opinions and Pivit's own algorithms, which will adjust prices to encourage trading, much like a market maker does in financial markets.

The best predictors will be publicly ranked.

Pivit's initial markets include one for Republicans taking control of the Senate and five individual elections, including the Kentucky Senate race and the Wisconsin gubernatorial race.

After creating Intrade, Mr. DePetris and his co-founders worked for financial markets trading stocks and other securities. To launch Pivit, they raised about $6 million in early funding. Its backers include Swedish company Cinnober Financial Technology AB, whose software will power the market; alternative investment firm Guggenheim Partners LLC; and boutique advisory firm Broadhaven Capital Partners LLC, which specializes in advising financial tech companies.

"A simple, standard measure of what the public thinks will happen at any point in time, on almost any subject, would be of immense value" to traders and companies, said Greg Phillips, a partner at Broadhaven.

Pivit, whose app is free, aims to make money from its audience through a variety of ways, including sponsorship by companies, selling extra features in the app, and sales of market data. It may also seek to launch regulated markets for predictions on some financial products.

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires

Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT)
Historical Stock Chart
From Mar 2024 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Microsoft Charts.
Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT)
Historical Stock Chart
From Apr 2023 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Microsoft Charts.