The move reflects growing interest among exchanges in event-based trading instruments that allow bets on real-world outcomes. Nasdaq said the approval supports its “Outcome-Related Options” initiative, while rival Cboe Global Markets is also preparing similar products pending regulatory clearance.
| Photo Credit:
JEENAH MOON

The U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission on Thursday approved a proposal ​by Nasdaq’s
options trading venue to list and trade ‌a new class of stock
market prediction instruments ​tied to a major index, according
to ⁠a regulatory order.
Several firms are increasingly seeking to enter the prediction
markets space, which allows users to bet ‌on the outcomes of
real-world events as it gains legitimacy and opens up ‌new
revenue streams and market insights.

The New York-based ‌exchange ⁠operator’s products are
cash-settled contracts that pay ⁠a fixed amount at expiration
depending on whether the index finishes above or below a set
level.

The SEC said the ​binary options – a ‌type of contract that
offers a payout based on the outcome of a yes-or-no bet – would
have a “fixed, all-or-nothing exercise settlement amount” of
$100 if ‌they expire in the money.

Nasdaq MRX, an ​electronic U.S. options exchange operated by
Nasdaq, will initially list the options linked ⁠to the Nasdaq-100
index and the Nasdaq-100 Micro index.
The Nasdaq-100 tracks 100 of the largest, non-financial
companies ‌listed on Nasdaq’s exchange, including Apple
, Nvidia and Intel. The micro index is
based on 1/100th of the full value of the Nasdaq-100.
The commission granted accelerated approval to Nasdaq’s request
that it applied for in March, saying the ‌proposal was
“consistent with the requirements of the act” and ​did not raise
new regulatory concerns.

“We welcome the SEC’s approval of Nasdaq MRX’s proposal ⁠to
list and trade Outcome-Related Options (OROs) tied to the
Nasdaq-100 ⁠Index,” a Nasdaq spokesperson said.
Its peer and options heavyweight Cboe Global Markets
is also ‌targeting a second-quarter launch for its “all-or-none”
styled contracts focused on financial and economic events,
subject ​to regulatory approvals.

Published on May 1, 2026



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