U.S. investors may soon be able to place regulated bets on political outcomes directly through their brokerage accounts, as asset managers race to bring prediction market-style exchange-traded funds to market.
Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart highlighted on Tuesday that Roundhill Investments has updated its SEC filing, setting a May 5 effective date for a suite of six funds.
These products would allow investors to wager on which party controls the House and Senate following the 2026 midterms, as well as the 2028 presidential race.
The lineup includes the Roundhill Democratic President ETF (BLUP) and Republican President ETF (REDP), along with parallel funds for Democratic or Republican control of the Senate (BLUS/REDS) and House (BLUH/REDH).
Rather than traditional stocks or bonds, the ETFs plan to use event contracts and futures tied to prediction market probabilities. A correct call on the winning side could deliver payouts, while the losing side would likely go to zero.
Seyffart noted that competitors Bitwise and GraniteShares, which filed similar applications earlier, are likely to launch around the same time. The move comes amid surging interest in prediction markets like Polymarket, which saw massive volume during the 2024 election cycle.
How these ETFs differ from Polymarket and Kalshi
Unlike Polymarket and Kalshi, the proposed Roundhill ETFs package binary event contracts into traditional exchange-traded funds that investors can buy and sell seamlessly through standard brokerage accounts, including within IRAs and 401(k)s.
This offers easier access, tax-advantaged treatment in retirement accounts, and SEC-regulated oversight without requiring separate platform sign-ups, crypto wallets, or direct CFTC account verification.
While Polymarket (often crypto-based with public trades) and Kalshi (CFTC-regulated fiat platform) allow direct, flexible betting on a wide range of events with potential for high leverage and immediate settlement, the ETFs function more like passive vehicles that track shifting probabilities—trading at roughly the market-implied odds (e.g., $0.60 share for 60% chance) and resolving to $1 or $0 on outcome.
They emphasize simplicity and mainstream integration over the granular, high-frequency trading and broader topic variety found on dedicated prediction platforms.
Read: Polymarket’s Morality: Trading, Value Extracting, or Literal Gambling?
Roundhill’s filing marks one of the first concrete steps toward mainstreaming these products within retirement accounts and standard brokerage platforms. If approved and launched as scheduled, the ETFs would represent a novel intersection of finance, politics, and entertainment—giving investors a direct financial stake in Washington’s power struggles.
With the midterms approaching, timing could hardly be more charged. Whether these funds attract serious capital or fizzle as niche novelties remains to be seen, but they signal Wall Street’s growing appetite for event-driven strategies beyond traditional markets.
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