Robinhood Markets Inc. (HOOD) is making a serious bet on prediction markets, and it's not messing around. The company announced it's acquiring a CFTC-regulated exchange to take direct control of the infrastructure behind this rapidly growing business. The stock jumped 3% in premarket trading on the news.
Building Its Own Prediction Market Empire
Here's what's happening: Robinhood is launching a futures and derivatives exchange and clearinghouse through a joint venture where it will act as the controlling partner. This isn't just a partnership—it's a move to own the pipes that make prediction markets work.
The venture has already lined up Susquehanna International Group as a day-one liquidity provider, with more liquidity firms expected to join. Robinhood says demand for prediction markets has exploded, and owning the infrastructure will let it roll out products faster and improve execution for customers.
The numbers back up the enthusiasm: prediction markets have become Robinhood's fastest-growing revenue line, with 9 billion contracts traded by more than 1 million customers over the past year. That's not a side project—that's a business.
The MIAXdx Deal and Regulatory Strategy
To speed things up, the joint venture is acquiring MIAXdx, a CFTC-licensed Designated Contract Market (DCM), Derivatives Clearing Organization (DCO), and Swap Execution Facility (SEF). MIAXdx is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Miami International Holdings Inc. (MIAX), which will keep skin in the game through a strategic 10% equity stake in the new exchange.
The acquired exchange will serve Robinhood's derivatives unit along with other Futures Commission Merchant platforms. Operations are expected to begin in 2026.
With its own exchange, Robinhood says it can introduce a broader range of contracts tied to economic outcomes, sports, politics, and financial indicators. Essentially, it's positioning itself to compete head-to-head with platforms like Kalshi and other CFTC-supervised prediction market operators.
Technical Picture Shows Stock Trying to Find Its Footing
HOOD is stabilizing above the $110 support zone, which has held up multiple times this month. The stock briefly dipped below its long-term rising trendline but reclaimed it, suggesting buyers are defending the structure.
The chart shows a broad symmetrical-triangle breakdown from the $150–$155 region that triggered the recent correction. The Supertrend indicator remains red near $133.84, signaling that larger-trend momentum is still pointed lower. Parabolic SAR dots remain above price, reinforcing cautious sentiment.
Still, short-term behavior is improving. Price reclaimed the mid-range band near $117.75, and higher lows are forming along the rising trendline. This suggests the stock is attempting to build a base rather than extend the selloff.
For the next leg higher, HOOD needs to break above $121, where horizontal resistance and the SAR line converge. A close above that level opens a path toward $130–$133, the region where the Supertrend flips and the broader trend begins to improve. If price loses $110, the next major support sits near $100.
What This Means for Investors
This expansion puts Robinhood in the same regulatory arena as Kalshi and other CFTC-supervised platforms. It's a strategic move into high-frequency retail trading categories that blend information markets with probability-based speculation.
For investors, this signals a push toward new, fee-generating products at a time when retail engagement has been volatile. By acquiring direct control over the exchange infrastructure that underpins prediction-market liquidity, Robinhood is betting it can build a durable, high-margin revenue stream that doesn't depend entirely on trading commissions or crypto volatility.
Whether prediction markets become a sustainable growth driver or a flash in the pan remains to be seen, but Robinhood is clearly committed to finding out—and it's willing to invest in the infrastructure to make it happen.