The first prediction market exchange traded funds in the United States could start trading as soon as next week. Investment firm Roundhill has updated its filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and set May 5 as the effective date for six new funds.
Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart said the change strongly suggests these products are ready to go live once that date arrives. He described them as the first prediction market ETFs because they are tied directly to event contracts rather than stocks or bonds.
Funds Tied to U.S. Election Outcomes
The initial batch of ETFs will focus on U.S. political outcomes, not companies or indexes. According to reports, the funds will track contracts on which party controls the House of Representatives or the Senate after upcoming elections.
These event contracts work like simple binary bets that pay out if a specific result happens and go to zero if it does not. The ETFs would bundle such contracts into a regulated wrapper that can trade on regular brokerage platforms, including retirement accounts in some cases.
How Prediction Market ETFs Work
Prediction markets already exist on platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket, where users trade event contracts directly. The new ETFs would instead hold those contracts inside a fund, letting investors buy or sell shares whose prices reflect the market’s view of the odds.
If the event goes against the fund’s position, the value of the underlying contracts can drop sharply, and filings warn that a wrong outcome could cause the ETF to lose nearly all its value. Supporters argue that this structure brings more transparency and regulation to prediction markets while making them easier to access for traditional investors.
Roundhill is not the only firm interested in this space. Bitwise and GraniteShares have also filed for similar products, and analysts expect they could launch around the same time if the SEC clears them.
Commentators say prediction market ETFs might “speed run” the path crypto ETFs took, moving a once‑niche idea into mainstream portfolios if they gain approval and volume. For now, all eyes are on May 5 to see whether the first wave actually lists and how investors respond in the opening days of trading.
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