
Live Los Angeles Kings offseason odds, Western Conference futures, and player next-team markets tracked across prediction markets after a first-round playoff exit.
Los Angeles KingsThe Los Angeles Kings are one of the more steadily traded NHL franchises on prediction markets, a function of a stable Pacific Division core and a postseason rivalry that draws recurring volume. The 2025-26 regular season is now complete: through 82 games as of June 4, 2026, the Kings finished 35-27-20 for 90 points and the eighth seed in the Western Conference, ending another campaign short of a deep run. With the season over and no live Stanley Cup contract for the franchise, the durable trading interest has shifted to the offseason board, where player next-team and roster-movement markets now carry the relevant volume. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those markets mean for the franchise heading into the summer.
With the Kings eliminated and the 2025-26 season closed, there is no live Stanley Cup futures contract tied to Los Angeles worth trading. The headline Stanley Cup Champion field still listed on aggregators is stale and contaminated with settled junk lines, so traders looking for real Kings exposure have moved to the offseason board above. That board is where the franchise's near-term price discovery now happens: player movement, roster construction, and the long view on next season's contender tier. The structural read is straightforward. A team that finishes 90 points and bows out early is priced as a middle-tier playoff club, not a championship favorite, and the offseason markets reflect a roster the market believes needs an upgrade rather than a teardown.
The Pacific Division remains the Kings' competitive home, and the durable read across recent seasons is consistent: Los Angeles is a reliable playoff entrant that the market does not price as a Cup-tier team. Through the just-completed 82-game season as of June 4, 2026, the eighth seed and a minus-22 goal differential underline a club that made the field but lacked the margin of the conference's elite. The Western Conference futures for next season will hinge on how aggressively the front office reshapes the roster this summer. Traders watching the Kings should weigh the offseason moves on the board above as the leading indicator of where the 2026-27 conference price opens.
The most active Kings-adjacent contract on the board right now is a player next-team market, the kind of roster-movement question that dominates the NHL offseason window between the season's end and the draft and free-agency period. These markets resolve on where a player signs or whether he stays put, and they trade heavily because they price a binary outcome with a hard deadline. For the Kings, durable volume drivers are the franchise's standing as a large-market, cap-relevant team that is frequently named in trade and signing speculation. The forward catalysts are concrete: the NHL Draft and the July 1 free-agency open. Reference the live board above for where each contract sits today.
The Los Angeles Kings have won the Stanley Cup twice, in 2012 and 2014, both under the core that defined the franchise's golden era. Founded in 1967, the Kings spent decades as a mid-pack franchise before that back-to-back contention window made them a recognized power. The recent trajectory, a string of playoff appearances that end before the conference final, establishes the current market identity: a competitive, well-run club that the board treats as a postseason regular rather than a title threat. That two-championship history is why traders give Los Angeles a stable floor of attention even in an offseason where the franchise has no live Cup contract.
As of June 4, 2026, the Kings have no live Stanley Cup contract after a first-round exit; the listed Stanley Cup Champion field is stale and contaminated. The most active Kings-adjacent offseason market is the Auston Matthews next-team contract, where "stays with Toronto or retires" trades around 14c. Check the live board above for current prices.
Kings offseason and player-movement markets trade across the major prediction-market platforms tracked by Prediction Genius, with depth varying by contract. Roster-movement markets typically show tighter books closer to the draft and free-agency deadlines. The board above aggregates the available platforms so you can compare prices directly.
Coverage spans Stanley Cup and Western Conference futures, player next-team and roster-movement markets, and front-office contracts such as coaching and general-manager questions when active. During the offseason, player-movement and re-signing markets carry the bulk of the relevant Kings volume.
The Los Angeles Kings last won the Stanley Cup in 2014, the second of two titles in three seasons after their first championship in 2012. Those remain the only two Stanley Cups in franchise history since the team was founded in 1967.
Roster construction is the durable driver. The Kings are priced as a middle-tier playoff club, having finished 35-27-20 for 90 points and the eighth seed in 2025-26, so offseason moves on the board above are the leading signal for how the market revalues the franchise heading into 2026-27.