- Bitwise filed for 2028 election outcome ETFs under its PredictionShares brand
- Asset managers are reframing election betting as “hedging” and portfolio risk tools
- SEC and CFTC may be forced to decide who controls event-driven finance
Wall Street is now trying to do something that sounds ridiculous until you remember how finance works. Asset managers want to turn the 2028 US presidential election into an ETF product. Bitwise has filed with the SEC to launch election-outcome ETFs through its new PredictionShares brand, and it’s not alone. GraniteShares and Roundhill are reportedly lining up with similar filings.

This isn’t some fringe crypto experiment anymore. It’s traditional finance seeing a new market, cleaning it up, wrapping it in a familiar wrapper, and selling it to investors who want exposure without ever touching crypto-native prediction platforms. And if you’ve watched ETFs evolve over the last decade, this move is painfully predictable.
Election Betting Is Being Rebranded as Political Risk Hedging
The sales pitch is already being prepared. Supporters aren’t calling these products “bets,” because regulators hate that word. They’re calling them hedges. The argument is that investors may want a way to manage political risk, since elections can move markets, reshape tax policy, alter regulation, and swing entire sectors.
That framing is clever, and it’s also convenient. It turns what most people would recognize as gambling into something that sounds respectable and measurable. Analysts like James Seyffart and Eric Balchunas have pointed out that the ETF industry will try to wrap almost anything into a fund if there’s demand, and this looks like the next frontier.
Regulators Are About to Get Cornered
This is landing at the worst possible time for regulators. Platforms like Coinbase, Polymarket, and Kalshi are already battling over whether event contracts count as derivatives or gambling. State regulators are involved, and the CFTC has also stepped in, arguing federal authority over certain event-driven contracts.

If the SEC approves election prediction ETFs, the debate shifts instantly. Approval would function as indirect legitimacy for prediction markets, even if regulators claim it’s “just a fund.” Once a product is ETF-eligible, it becomes part of the financial system by default, and regulators lose the ability to treat it like a novelty.
This Isn’t Really About Elections, It’s About Control
The bigger story isn’t political. It’s structural. Whoever gets to regulate event-driven finance will control a new category of markets that sits somewhere between derivatives, gambling, and macro hedging. That line has always been blurry, but ETFs would blur it even more.
If prediction markets fit inside ETFs, they stop being “weird crypto stuff” and start being finance. Once that happens, there is no putting the old line back. Wall Street knows that, which is why it’s moving first.











