My first big mistake on Kalshi: Underestimating resolution uncertainty
I've been dipping my toes into Kalshi a bit more lately, mostly on the economic data releases and a few of the more straightforward political events. My biggest lesson so far came from a contract predicting whether a certain unemployment number would be above or below a specific percentage. I had a strong read on the underlying economic indicators and felt confident the number would come in lower. I sized into it a bit heavier than I usually would for a new market, thinking it was a near-sure thing.
What I completely underestimated was the reporting risk, not just the underlying economic reality. The initial release was exactly on my side, and for a glorious few minutes, my contract looked like a winner. Then, almost immediately, there was a minor revision announced due to a data collection error in a specific region, pushing the number just over the threshold. It wasn't a malicious change, just a standard statistical revision that happens sometimes, but it flipped my contract to a loser. The market priced that uncertainty in quickly, and my initial conviction quickly evaporated as I watched the price move against me, locking in a significant loss relative to my usual position size. Lesson learned: always consider the potential for initial reporting error or subsequent revision, especially on stats with a narrow margin. It's not just about what happens, but how and when it gets officially tallied.