Wall Street Desperate to Copy Cryptocurrency Prediction Markets as Cboe Files with Yes/No Options



Cboe wants to reinstate the all-or-nothing option (a contract that pays a certain amount if a condition is met and zero if a condition is not met).

This may sound like a small product refresh, but the timing is hard to ignore. Prediction markets have trained new retail reflexes. In other words, we convert beliefs into numbers, like probabilities, and buy and sell those numbers.

Cboe’s proposal to the SEC is an attempt to package the same instincts within U.S. exchange rules, clearing, and intermediary distribution.

However, it’s important to note that Cboe isn’t trying to replicate all of Polymarket’s features. The company is, in fact, trying to compete under the same mental model — a simple yes/no frame, a single price, and quick feedback — under regulatory scrutiny.

If it works, stochastic trading will cease to be a crypto-specific curiosity and become a mainstream retail format next to stocks and standard options, with the same compliance wrapper.

If it fails, it’s not because the form of profit is unfamiliar, but because there are limits to what can be put on the licensed market and how close it can get to activities like sportsbooks.

Prediction market in suit

Binary options are easy to explain and even easier to understand.

The buyer pays the price today for a contract that is settled in a fixed payment if certain conditions are maintained at expiration. In many designs, contracts trade within a narrow band between “no chance” and “certainty,” so that prices feel like implicit odds, even though commissions, market frictions, and risk premiums prevent a clean probability reading.

This one number is key. You don’t need to learn Greek to understand what you own.
Binary options also require a long paper trail. Cboe itself launched binary options in 2008, but later withdrew it when fewer people took it.

The current initiative, coupled with discussions with retail brokerages, has the aim of providing a regulated alternative to the rapidly growing forecasting venues, while sticking to financial market outcomes rather than open-ended event questions.

In other words, the 60 second explanation for binary options is that you are buying conditions, not upside, which fluctuates as the market moves. It is either settled in money and receives a fixed payment, or it is settled in money and receives nothing.

This sense of fixed reward is why many retail traders describe these contracts as more like odds than options, and why they fit neatly into the mental category popularized by prediction markets.

The crucial difference between the two is where the contract exists.

Cboe’s version will sit within a regulated exchange stack that includes standard broker rails, monitoring, margin rules, and clearing.

Prediction markets span a wide range of designs and regulatory environments, from US-regulated event contracts to offshore or crypto-native venues that rely on smart contracts, oracles, and venue-level rulebooks.

This distinction determines who has access, what can be listed, how disputes are handled, and how quickly products can evolve.

Why does binary keep being returned?

There’s a reason why binary options keep coming back in waves.

Retail demand repeatedly clusters around markets and assets that feel simple and marginal. Fixed-loss, fixed-pay contracts provide a good and clear way to size risk. You can decide what you’re willing to lose before you press the button, and you don’t have to convert a 1 standard deviation move into a gain curve.

What has changed over the years is the interface that people have learned.

Prediction markets have normalized the idea that beliefs can be exchanged as prices. They made probabilities easier to read even for people who don’t care what’s inside.

The “Yes 62” or “No 38” contract is a user experience win because it compresses uncertainty into a single tradable number and makes the act of updating a view feel like moving a slider rather than building a strategy.

All of this means you can see Cboe’s bet for what it really is: a distributed play. Exchanges already have the infrastructure and broker pipes in place. Cboe itself has made it clear that it is focusing on areas related to prediction markets and cryptocurrencies as part of its growth agenda, even as it benefits from the options boom in its core business.

There’s also an unpleasant and unavoidable history lesson here. Binary options has become a dirty word in the retail industry due to scams and deceptive offshore marketing that take advantage of the product’s simplicity to sell a less-than-fair market. This legacy raises the bar for all exchange efforts in the United States.

The simplicity of these contracts is not enough to sell them. It needs to be simple inside a structure that is monitored, standardized and very difficult to manipulate.

The real battle is distribution and trust.

If you place the two stacks side by side, the competition is the allowed odds and the open odds.

A regulated exchange stack incorporates three benefits.

First, it is already integrated within brokerage apps where a significant amount of retail trading takes place.

Second, it comes with clearer guardrails around custody, clearing, and standardized payments.

Third, it can be framed as a financial product rather than a social betting product.

But that stack also comes with non-negotiable constraints. U.S. exchanges cannot list “things people want to discuss.” The range of products will be limited by what regulators will tolerate, what oversight can support, and what will not give rise to the view that the exchange is operating a casino.

CryptoNative and other open spaces thrive precisely where those constraints are weakest. They can move faster, iterate market designs quickly, and list culturally relevant questions that capture attention beyond finance.

Their problem is legitimacy and trust at scale.

If contracts are built around oracles, dispute processes, or venue rulebooks, users must trust that settlements will be handled cleanly in edge cases. This is difficult for both users who prefer this format and mainstream retailers.

Here, the story of U.S.-regulated prediction markets complicates matters. Mr. Carsi has long argued that event contracts fall within the framework of federal goods and has waged legal battles over where state gaming regulations end and federal oversight begins.

In early February, a Massachusetts judge ordered Carsi to stop offering sports-related contracts in the state unless he obtained a state gaming license, reminding Carsi that even federally regulated matters can conflict with state-level gambling regimes.

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