Charles Schwab is launching a prediction-market partnership with Cboe, wiring the event-contract product directly into one of the largest US retail brokerage platforms. The move is squarely aimed at pulling retail flow away from Polymarket and Kalshi, the two venues that have dominated retail event trading through 2025 and into 2026.
Why it matters
Cboe's regulated event-contract infrastructure gives Schwab a compliance-clean distribution channel, something Polymarket's offshore roots and Kalshi's CFTC-only perimeter do not offer. Retail traders inside a Schwab account can now get event exposure without ever touching a crypto-native venue, which compresses the addressable market for the existing leaders at exactly the moment they are scaling derivatives. The same logic that drove Robinhood and Webull into tokenized equity rails is now repeating in event contracts.
Market impact
Kalshi's regulatory edge was the assumption it would own the US retail prediction market in 2026. Schwab's distribution changes that math overnight. Polymarket, still offshore, faces the harder structural problem: a US retail trader now has a single-account, regulated alternative without KYC friction across borders. Expect the next quarter to test whether event-contract volume migrates to Cboe-hosted rails, and whether Kalshi responds by deepening its Bitcoin leverage push.
Frequently asked questions
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What does this mean for the future of retail prediction markets?
The move signals that TradFi distribution is becoming the decisive factor in retail event-contract trading, pressuring crypto-native venues to either deepen regulated reach or differentiate on product, such as Bitcoin leverage.
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