Coinbase has agreed to acquire The Clearing Company as it accelerates its move into prediction markets, deepening its exposure to event-based trading only days after rolling out the product to users. The transaction signals that the exchange intends to make prediction markets a permanent part of its platform rather than a limited experiment.

Bringing Prediction Market Expertise In-House

The agreement follows the recent launch of prediction markets on Coinbase, which allows users to trade contracts tied to real-world outcomes within the same interface they already use for crypto assets, derivatives, and equities. By adding event-based trading to an existing multi-asset environment, the company has positioned these markets alongside traditional financial instruments rather than treating them as a separate category.

Coinbase described the acquisition as a step toward its longer-term goal of becoming an “Everything Exchange,” a single venue where users can access multiple asset classes. The Clearing Company, a startup focused on regulated, onchain prediction market infrastructure, is expected to play a central role in shaping how those markets scale inside Coinbase’s ecosystem.

The Clearing Company is led by founder Toni Gemayel, described by Coinbase as a key figure in the development of modern prediction markets. The team includes veterans with experience building and operating event-based trading platforms in both regulated and decentralized settings. Coinbase said this background will support its plans to grow prediction markets within compliant frameworks.

Announcing the deal, Coinbase said: “Today, we’re building on that momentum by acquiring The Clearing Company, a startup with a strong vision for the future of prediction markets.” The company added that 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.”

Coinbase has emphasized that its prediction markets operate through regulated venues, distinguishing them from offshore or grey-area platforms. The Clearing Company was founded on the view that prediction markets can only expand at scale if they combine onchain infrastructure with regulatory oversight, a philosophy that aligns closely with Coinbase’s broader compliance-focused strategy.

By bringing the team in-house rather than relying on external partnerships or licensed technology, Coinbase aims to strengthen its ability to design event contracts, manage clearing and settlement, and support liquidity across a wider range of outcomes.

Deal Timeline and Acquisition Context

The transaction is expected to close in January, subject to customary closing conditions. Until completion, The Clearing Company will continue operating independently. Once finalized, its staff are set to join Coinbase and contribute directly to the expansion of prediction markets on the platform.

The Clearing Company represents Coinbase’s tenth acquisition this year, highlighting the pace at which the exchange is widening its scope beyond core crypto trading. Earlier in 2025, Coinbase entered a $2.9 billion agreement to acquire derivatives platform Deribit and later purchased investment app Echo in a deal valued at about $375 million. The series of deals reflects a strategy centered on building a multi-asset platform that can compete with brokerages offering access to stocks, derivatives, and alternative instruments.

Coinbase has framed prediction markets as a natural extension of this approach. Event-based contracts allow users to trade on outcomes linked to elections, economic indicators, sports, and cultural events, with prices reflecting collective expectations as new information emerges.

Prediction markets tend to generate frequent trading activity, as participants adjust positions in response to shifting probabilities rather than waiting for long-term price movements. Coinbase sees this pattern as a way to increase engagement while reducing reliance on crypto market volatility.

In explaining the significance of the category, Coinbase said: “Prediction markets let people trade on real-world events across everything from elections and the economy to sports and culture.” The company added that it sees an opportunity to allow millions of users to participate in these markets “right alongside their cash, crypto, equities, and derivatives portfolios.”

The exchange has positioned event-based trading as complementary to its existing offerings, rather than an isolated product. This integration supports the broader “Everything Exchange” concept, under which different asset classes remain active even when one segment of the market slows.