Event-driven capital is flowing into the prediction markets, but access to ETFs is stalling just as demand peaks. The SEC’s pause disrupts momentum just as prediction market demand accelerates into the election cycle.
According to Reuters, filings from Roundhill, Bitwise and GraniteShares missed the 75-day fast-track period after additional review requests report. This slowdown is important because the event markets already saw $85 billion in volume across Polymarket and Kalshi in early 2026.
As open interest [OI] As major events advance, timing becomes critical to meeting peak demand. However, regulators’ scrutiny focuses on pricing, disclosures and manipulation risks, which explains the hesitation.
This mirrors previous Bitcoin [BTC] ETF cycles, where approval followed long-term resistance. Meanwhile, the slowdown fragments liquidity between native platforms and ETFs.
This gap implies that demand exists, but that the conversion into structured inflows remains limited without timely regulatory clarity.
That timing delay is not random, as the SEC’s review now focuses on the core structure of these products.
Proposed ETFs rely on derivatives tied to binary contracts that settle at $1 or $0, which entail sharp price jumps that are close to resolution. As prediction markets exceed $150 billion in volume, liquidity remains unevenly distributed across contracts, especially outside of major events.
This creates challenges for reliable pricing and net asset value (NAV) tracking. Meanwhile, concentrated settlement windows increase volatility and litigation risk.
These frictions explain the slowdown, as regulators look for clearer disclosures and pricing models to ensure consumer exposure does not exacerbate structural instability.
Demand growth continues despite regulatory delays
Despite these structural concerns, underlying demand continues to grow, indicating strong market traction. Cumulative volume exceeds $150 billion, while Kalshi recorded $14.81 billion in April alone.


With monthly activity exceeding $20 to $25 billion, participation is expanding beyond crypto-native users. Meanwhile, the number of active traders is in the millions, reflecting deeper market penetration.


Institutional involvement is also growing through block trades and custom contracts. This expansion suggests that the market is maturing independently of access to ETFs, implying that long-term adoption remains intact even if formal products lag behind.
Final summary
- The rollout of ETFs in the predictive market is slowing as SEC oversight focuses on structural risks, limiting the conversion of more than $150 billion in demand into regulated inflows.
- Regulatory delays affect the timing, not the trajectory, as rising volumes and institutional activity point to continued adoption over the long term, despite limited access to ETFs.
