Each fund gains exposure through swap agreements referencing binary event contracts traded on CFTC-regulated markets.
Prediction Market News
Roundhill Investments is set to launch the first US exchange-traded funds (ETFs) tied to political prediction markets on May 5, 2026. Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart confirmed the date following a post-effective amendment Roundhill filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on April 29, 2026. The filing established a new effective date for its previously submitted registration statement.
Roundhill fillings for prediction market ETFs. Source: SEC
The six funds cover three branches of government across two parties. They are the Roundhill Democratic President ETF (BLUP), Republican President ETF (REDP), Democratic Senate ETF (BLUS), Republican Senate ETF (REDS), Democratic House ETF (BLUH), and Republican House ETF (REDH). The Senate and House funds are tied to who controls each chamber after the Nov. 3, 2026, midterm elections. The presidential funds target the outcome of the Nov. 7, 2028, race.
How the Funds Work
Each fund gains exposure through swap agreements referencing binary event contracts traded on CFTC-regulated markets. These contracts settle at $1 if a specified outcome occurs and $0 if it does not. The prospectus states in capitalized text that if the targeted party does not win, "the fund will lose substantially all of its value."
Roundhill's funds do not close after an outcome is determined. Once the market prices a result above $0.995 or below $0.005 for five consecutive trading days, the fund treats it as final and rolls into the next election cycle. Midterm funds would shift to the 2028 House and Senate races. Presidential funds would roll to the 2032 race. The prospectus states that if the market is later found to be wrong, "there will be no recourse" for shareholders.
Bitwise and GraniteShares each filed identical six-fund slates in February 2026. Bitwise's funds, marketed under the "PredictionShares" brand, terminate shortly after each outcome is determined. GraniteShares, like Roundhill, rolls its funds into the next cycle. Seyffart expects all three issuers to launch around the same time.
The CFTC withdrew a Biden-era proposal in February 2026 that would have banned political event contracts. State regulators in Massachusetts, New York, and Nevada continue to challenge the underlying contracts in court. Roundhill has also filed to list non-political Prediction Market ETFs tied to whether the US will enter a recession, according to a filing flagged by Balchunas.
