Nasdaq Moves In, Predicts Market Has Reached Mainstream Inflection Point
Original Title: "Nasdaq Enters Prediction Market: Wall Street Bets on Tech Index with 'Yes or No'
Original Author: Asher, Odaily Planet Daily
Last night, Nasdaq filed a rule change proposal with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), planning to launch an option contract that allows investors to make 'yes or no' bets on major stock indices.
According to the filing, Nasdaq intends to list "binary options," also known as "event-based options," on its flagship products—the Nasdaq 100 Index and Nasdaq 100 Micro Index. If approved, this will be Nasdaq's first official launch of a product with prediction market characteristics.
This move signifies that traditional securities trading platform giants are actively entering the rapidly growing prediction market space.
What Are Binary Options?
The proposed contract price range is from 1 cent to 1 dollar, with the price itself directly reflecting the market's judgment on the probability of a certain outcome.
For example, if a contract revolves around "whether the Nasdaq 100 Index will meet a certain condition at a specific time," then:
· If the market believes the probability of this outcome is 80%, the price may be close to 0.8 dollars;
· At expiration, if the condition is met, the contract settles at 1 dollar;
· If the condition is not met, the contract value becomes zero.
If traditional options are about speculating "how much up or down," binary options are more about "whether it will happen." There are no complex parameters, no range calculations, only the result itself. This all-or-nothing settlement method makes trading more like making a clear judgment about the future.
It is for this reason that these products are more akin to the logic of prediction markets.
Why Choose Nasdaq 100?
Nasdaq chose not just any index but one of the most sentiment-sensitive assets in the market. The Nasdaq 100 has long been seen as a core indicator of the U.S. tech sector, with component stocks concentrated in heavyweight companies like Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, etc. These companies are almost always in the market spotlight every quarter, with a financial report, a regulatory announcement, or even a policy statement that could quickly manifest in the index's trend.
The high concentration of constituents often leads to a single focus driving the Nasdaq 100's movements. At certain times, the market may be focused on AI expectations, then shift to interest rate paths or policy changes. During earnings or policy-heavy periods, the index typically reacts swiftly to market sentiment in a concentrated manner over a short period, rather than prolonged back-and-forth.
Furthermore, the Nasdaq 100 itself has a mature derivatives trading foundation, ample liquidity, and a robust pricing system. Introducing new structured products on this underlying asset makes the risk manageable and more easily accepted by the market.
Two Approaches of Traditional Trading Platforms to Enter the Game
The Nasdaq is not the first traditional trading platform to show interest in forecasting markets. In October 2025, the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, Intercontinental Exchange, announced a strategic investment of about $2 billion in Polymarket, holding a stake of around 20%, with a trading valuation reaching about $80 billion at one point.
The NYSE's choice was not to launch its prediction products but to enter this field through capital participation and data collaboration. Its core intent is to acquire real-time probability data formed in the prediction markets and integrate it into the institutional service system. For the NYSE, the prediction market is more like a complementary sentiment indicator and data asset.
In contrast, Nasdaq's approach is more direct. It chose to embed a binary structure into its core index product line, completing the extension within the existing trading framework. Compared to investing in external prediction market platforms, this approach means that predictive trading is integrated into the standardized securities product system rather than just being an external data source.
The difference in the two strategies reflects the different judgments of traditional trading platforms when faced with new trading structures.
Prediction Markets Being Integrated into Traditional Trading Platform Product Offerings
Regardless of whether the US SEC ultimately approves this proposal, Nasdaq's filing of a rule change application has already sent a clear signal — predictive trading is no longer just an experiment in crypto platforms or niche markets but is beginning to be integrated into traditional trading platform product offerings.
For a long time, mainstream derivatives have revolved around price fluctuations, with investors making judgments on the magnitude and timing through different structures. Binary options simplify the issue to whether the outcome is true, shifting the focus of the trade from the extent to the conclusion itself.
With the Nasdaq 100 Index being included in such contract structures, the trading logic has become more straightforward. The market's focus is no longer on the extent of change but on whether a certain outcome will materialize. What the price reflects is not just fluctuation but a consensus on the probability of the outcome.
For Nasdaq, this is an extension of its product line. For the prediction market, this is the beginning of its structure being formally accepted by the mainstream system. If this product is eventually implemented, it could be an attempt to connect traditional derivatives with event-driven trading.
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