Cboe Global Markets Inc. has launched the first products under its new prediction markets suite, Cboe Predicts, introducing binary option contracts tied to the Mini-S&P 500 Index (XSP). The offering signals a push by a major exchange operator into event-based trading within a regulated framework.
New binary contracts tied to mini-S&P 500
The initial contracts, XSPBW and XSPBX, allow traders to take positions on the performance of the S&P 500 at one-tenth its standard size. By using the smaller XSP index, the products aim to lower the scale of exposure while maintaining linkage to a broad U.S. equity benchmark.
These contracts are currently available through Interactive Brokers and are expected to roll out on Charles Schwab in the coming months. Cboe said the addition expands its S&P-linked lineup, which already includes same-day expiry options such as SPX 0DTE.
Simplified “yes-or-no” market structure
The new suite uses a binary payout model, where outcomes resolve to a fixed result based on whether a condition is met. According to the company, this structure is designed to simplify participation by reducing outcomes to a clear “yes-or-no” format tied to index performance.
Rising interest in prediction markets
The launch comes as prediction markets see rapid growth across financial platforms. Firms including Robinhood and Interactive Brokers have increased their presence in event-based trading, reflecting broader demand for instruments tied to specific outcomes rather than continuous price movements.
Trading activity in this segment has expanded sharply, with volumes climbing from under $1 billion in mid-2024 to tens of billions by 2026, signaling a shift toward more structured speculative products.
Regulatory backdrop and positioning
In the United States, regulation of event contracts remains unsettled. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is reviewing how such products should be classified, while disputes continue between federal regulators and state authorities.
Cboe is positioning its products differently by classifying them as security options. This places them under the existing oversight framework used for U.S.-listed options, avoiding some of the jurisdictional uncertainty affecting other prediction platforms.
Shift toward regulated access
The move reflects a broader transition of prediction-style trading into established financial markets. By offering centrally cleared contracts tied to a major equity index, Cboe is combining speculative event-based structures with the transparency and controls of traditional exchanges.
For traders, this introduces a distinct approach compared with less regulated platforms. The contracts operate within standard market hours, and their fixed payout structure defines risk and return upfront, contrasting with assets that have open-ended price movement.
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