Roundhill Investments has filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to launch six exchange-traded funds designed to track the outcomes of the 2028 U.S. federal elections.
The proposed products would use event contracts, a derivative structure linked to specific political outcomes, allowing investors to gain direct exposure to which party controls the White House, Senate, and House of Representatives.
If approved, the lineup would represent one of the first attempts to package political event exposure into a traditional ETF format accessible through standard brokerage accounts.
The filing includes funds covering all three major elected federal branches for both major political parties:
Each fund would derive value from event contracts tied to the specified electoral outcome in 2028.
Industry observers, including Eric Balchunas, have described the filing as potentially groundbreaking. The innovation lies less in the concept of political prediction markets, which already exist on platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi, and more in the ETF wrapper structure.
An ETF format could:
The structure also opens the door for institutions to hedge political risk tied to fiscal policy, taxation, regulatory changes, or sector-specific legislation.
Despite its novelty, the proposal faces material hurdles.
The SEC and Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) continue refining oversight of event contracts in the U.S. Regulatory clarity remains a central obstacle, and the SEC has not yet approved the filing.
Approval would require careful consideration of whether election-linked derivatives align with public policy standards for registered investment products.
Five of the six proposed funds are expected to experience elevated net asset value (NAV) volatility, reflecting the binary structure of event contracts.
Like traditional prediction markets, these instruments are often all-or-nothing. If the predicted political outcome does not occur, the contract’s value could fall to zero.
This binary payoff structure introduces significant risk asymmetry compared to traditional equity or bond ETFs.
If authorized, the products would formalize political risk exposure within the regulated ETF ecosystem. That shift could transform election forecasting from niche derivatives markets into mainstream portfolio instruments.
Whether regulators approve the structure will determine if event-based political exposure becomes institutionalized through traditional financial infrastructure or remains confined to specialized trading platforms.
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