A new category of exchange-traded funds will enter the US market next week, giving investors direct exposure to election outcomes through regulated products.

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Roundhill Investments plans to launch six ETFs tied to which party controls the White House and Congress, marking the first time prediction market strategies appear in ETF form.

Structure and Market Exposure

According to SEC filing, Roundhill’s lineup includes funds linked to Democrats and Republicans across three branches of power. The products cover the presidency, Senate, and House, with ticker symbols BLUP, REDP, BLUS, REDS, BLUH, and REDH. The congressional funds track outcomes of the November 2026 midterm elections, while the presidential funds reference the 2028 race.

The ETFs gain exposure through swap agreements tied to binary event contracts traded on markets regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. These contracts settle at

The prospectus states that if the selected party fails to win, “the fund will lose substantially all of its value.” The structure creates a binary payoff profile with limited downside protection.

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Roundhill does not plan to liquidate the funds after an outcome is determined. Instead, once markets assign near certainty to a result for several consecutive days, the funds will roll exposure into the next election cycle. Midterm funds will shift to 2028 races, while presidential funds will move to 2032.

Competition and Regulatory Backdrop

Other asset managers have filed similar products. Bitwise and GraniteShares submitted proposals for six comparable funds earlier this year. Bitwise plans to terminate its funds shortly after outcomes are decided, while GraniteShares uses a rolling structure similar to Roundhill.

Prediction contracts already trade on platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi, but ETFs could expand access by allowing investors to hold these exposures in standard brokerage accounts and some retirement plans.

Regulatory uncertainty remains. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission withdrew a proposal in February that would have banned political event contracts. However, state regulators in jurisdictions including Massachusetts, New York, and Nevada continue to challenge these contracts in court.

Roundhill has also filed for non-political prediction ETFs, including products linked to whether the US economy enters a recession.

This article was written by Jared Kirui at www.financemagnates.com.CryptoCurrencyRead More

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