Polymarket reports to have added two new partners this week which include Dow Jones Company and the New York Rangers of the NHL.
Polymarket agreed to two new partnerships, and the move gave the team great pride. One deal came with Dow Jones & Company, the publisher behind The Wall Street Journal, Barron’s and MarketWatch, and staff felt tense joy inside. Another deal came with the New York Rangers of the National Hockey League, and fans felt a rush of energy. The Dow Jones deal lets Polymarket place prediction market signals across Dow Jones content, and workers sensed big pressure. Signals come from Polymarket’s platform and show public views on future events across the economy, politics and culture, and traders feel deep focus.
Dow Jones websites gain special sections for the information, and many readers felt real interest. Readers get clear views on prediction market ratings for key questions and shifts over time, and some readers felt curious hope. Both firms built a new earnings calendar that shows market expectations for financial results of listed companies before reports, and planners felt strain. Dow Jones CEO Almar Latour said the aim is open access to prediction market data, and his statement held steady confidence.
He said data grows fast and gives real-time insight into public beliefs on events that have not happened yet, and he felt calm trust. He added that the partnership helps readers understand market feeling and judge possible risks, and he felt a firm purpose. Polymarket CEO Shayne Coplan said Polymarket data inside Dow Jones stories delivers a “truly comprehensive news experience,” and his words held pride. He believes real-time prediction numbers inside reports make information useful and complete for readers, and he felt rising excitement.
Polymarket Lands Rangers Role
Polymarket signed a deal with the New York Rangers, and the staff felt calm joy. This agreement makes Polymarket the Official Prediction Markets Partner for the team, and leaders sensed pride. The company name and branding appear around Madison Square Garden during Rangers home games, and workers feel rising energy. Fans see Polymarket on LED boards, in on-ice contests, on concourse activities and on digitally improved dashboard signs on TV, and fans felt thrilled.
Polymarket stays as the Presenting Partner for one Rangers Centennial Theme Night in the 2025–26 season, and organisers sensed duty. Madison Square Garden Sports Corp COO Jamaal Lesane said Polymarket is “the perfect fit” for the Rangers, and he felt a strong belief. Coplan said Rangers are “an ideal franchise” to spread prediction markets to more people, and he felt hope. This deal comes after Kalshi and Polymarket reached similar licensing agreements with the NHL in October, and the developers sensed a push. The NHL agreed to share official league data and allow use of NHL marks, logos and titles on prediction market products, and planners felt the weight. It marked the first partnership of its kind with a major sports league, and many felt shocked.
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