The Hottest World Cup Trade Wasn’t Sports Betting, It Was Tinder

The most profitable World Cup trade this month was not a Polymarket bet on Spain or France. It was a Tinder boom that helped lift Match Group (MTCH) stock.
The stock had slumped about 12% before the tournament began on June 11. It has since climbed roughly 13%, erasing those losses and pushing back near its highs for the year.
Prediction Markets Grabbed the Headlines
Sports betting drove most of the World Cup money story. On Polymarket, the tournament winner market has drawn hundreds of millions of dollars in wagers, with Spain and France the narrow favorites.
The buzz around World Cup prediction markets was easy to see. Sector open interest hit a record $1.48 billion in mid-June as fans piled into match outcomes.
Yet the smarter equity trade ran through dating apps. Match Group, the parent of Tinder and Hinge, watched its shares rebound as fresh engagement data reached investors.
Inside Tinder’s World Cup jump
Tinder logged its gains in the tournament’s first six days, from June 11 to 16. Compared with June 2025, US matches jumped almost 60%, while total users rose 15%.
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Across the 16 host cities in the United States, Mexico, and Canada, activity from international fans climbed 47%, according to data reported by Fast Company. The figures track the influx of traveling supporters.
That timing mattered. The data circulated in late June, just as Match Group shares closed at $37.17 on June 26 after a 6.4% jump.
The Quieter World Cup Trade
The rebound lands on a longer turnaround story. Tinder had shed users for nearly two years, drawing activist investors Elliott Investment Management and Starboard Value, who pushed for change and a new chief executive.
In March, Tinder registrations returned to year-over-year growth for the first time in almost two years, while Hinge revenue grew 28%. New CEO Spencer Rascoff framed the shift in the company’s first-quarter results.
Tinder works better today than it did before. Our product changes are resonating with Gen Z and driving improvements in leading indicators.
A World Cup engagement bump fits that narrative, which is why investors rewarded it. While bettors split their money between Polymarket and Kalshi, Match Group offered a calmer way to trade the same event.
Even so, the average analyst target sits near $40, a consensus Moderate Buy that leaves limited room above current levels.
The caution is in Match Group’s own numbers. Tinder paying users still fell 5% in the first quarter, so engagement has not yet become revenue.
With the final set for July 19, the test is whether the swiping outlasts the tournament. A few traders banked millions on Polymarket, but the cleaner bet was the stock.
Источник: BeInCrypto
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