Building the Everything Exchange, One Acquisition at a Time
Coinbase Global Inc. (COIN) announced Monday it's acquiring The Clearing Company, a prediction market startup aimed at creating an on-chain, permissionless platform for betting on real-world events. If the name sounds vaguely familiar, that's because Coinbase already backed the company with $15 million in venture funding back in August. Now they're just making it official and bringing the whole operation in-house.
The real get here is Toni Gemayel, who led growth at both Polymarket and Kalshi before launching The Clearing Company. That's a resume that screams "this person knows how prediction markets actually work." Coinbase seems to think so too, saying in a press release that "Toni and the team will help scale world-class prediction markets trading on Coinbase and accelerate our ambitions for this exciting category as part of the Everything Exchange."
The Prediction Market Land Grab
The timing here tells you everything about where Coinbase sees the future heading. Just days before this acquisition, the exchange formally integrated Kalshi to power its prediction markets. That puts them in the same club as Robinhood Markets Inc. (HOOD), which partnered with Kalshi earlier this year. Everyone wants a piece of this action.
But Coinbase isn't just building out the infrastructure. They're also fighting for regulatory clarity. Shortly after the Kalshi integration, Coinbase filed lawsuits against Michigan, Illinois, and Connecticut, challenging whether states have authority to regulate prediction markets at all. Their argument? The Commodity Futures Trading Commission should be the sole regulator, not a patchwork of state gaming commissions.
It's a bold stance, but it makes sense if you're trying to build a national (or global) prediction market platform. Navigating 50 different state regulatory regimes would be a nightmare.
The Bigger Picture
This acquisition fits neatly into Coinbase's "Everything Exchange" vision, which is exactly what it sounds like: a platform where you can trade everything from crypto to stocks to predictions about who wins the next election. The company recently introduced stock trading for select U.S. users, further expanding beyond its cryptocurrency roots.
Prediction markets had their breakout moment in 2024, with platforms like Polymarket processing billions in trading volume around the U.S. presidential election. Now the question is whether that was a one-time spike or the beginning of a new asset class. Coinbase is clearly betting on the latter.
Price Action: Coinbase (COIN) shares closed up 1.13% at $247.90 during Monday's regular session and added another 0.20% in after-hours trading to reach $248.40. According to proprietary Edge Rankings, Growth is the strongest category for COIN at 96.55 out of 100.




