Bitwise & GraniteShares Push Prediction ETFs Into Mainstream

Betting on the elections has never been so mainstream – two massive crypto hedge funds file for specific prediction market ETFs.

Man in suit jumps with joy surrounded by money faling from the sky infront of the Capitol Building.
Created by Gabor Kovacs from Ciphera

Asset managers are trying to wrap election betting into a familiar Wall Street package, with a fresh burst of filings that would create exchange-traded funds tied to U.S. political outcomes.

Regulatory submissions this week show multiple proposed products designed to track “event contracts” linked to elections, signaling a new phase in the financialization of prediction markets—until recently a niche corner of crypto-adjacent trading.

Election-Contract ETFs Are Moving From Novelty To Filing Frenzy

Bitwise and GraniteShares have each filed paperwork with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to launch suites of prediction-market ETFs. The proposals are framed around exposure to binary outcomes—contracts that typically pay out $1 if a specified event occurs and $0 if it doesn’t.

Several proposed funds are tied to U.S. election results across the presidency and control of Congress, with the products expected to seek exposure primarily through derivatives such as swaps that reference regulated event contracts. At least some versions of the structure contemplate holding the underlying event contracts more directly where allowed.

The language in the filings underscores the obvious: these are high-risk instruments by design. Unlike broad index funds, the return profile can collapse to zero based purely on an outcome that has nothing to do with earnings, cash flows, or even traditional market volatility.

Why Crypto Traders Should Care, Even If They Never Touch Them

The timing is not accidental. Prediction markets have been posting eye-catching growth metrics, according to data cited in industry reports, with recent monthly volume hitting new highs and user activity climbing sharply. That expansion is now drawing product engineers who made their names packaging crypto exposure for brokerage accounts.

For crypto investors, the significance is less about whether these ETFs get approved quickly—and more about what they normalize. If election-linked event contracts can be “ETF-ized,” it strengthens the case that more exotic, on-chain-native forms of speculation can be repackaged into traditional rails, expanding the addressable investor base.

The risk is equally clear: headline-driven political volatility could spill into adjacent markets, and a wave of retail access via ETFs could amplify short-term swings around debates, court rulings, polling shocks, or Election Day itself.

Even in a market already crowded with new crypto and altcoin vehicles, election-contract ETFs would mark a boundary-pushing step—one that could reshape how traders think about “macro” exposure inside a brokerage account.

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This article is for information purposes only and should not be considered trading or investment advice. Nothing herein shall be construed as financial, legal, or tax advice. Trading forex, cryptocurrencies, and CFDs pose a considerable risk of loss.

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Samantha Diamo

Samantha is a journalist at Ciphera, covering the latest stories and trends shaping the crypto and Web3 space.

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