ICE is making a strategic pivot toward alternative data, capitalizing on Polymarket’s proven accuracy in forecasting real-world events to sell a new form of intelligence to hedge funds and asset managers.
According to a press release dated Oct. 7, Intercontinental Exchange will invest up to $2 billion in cash in the decentralized prediction-market platform Polymarket, valuing the five-year-old company at $8 billion before the investment.
The cornerstone of the deal is not just the capital injection. It grants the NYSE owner exclusive global rights to distribute Polymarket’s raw, event-driven probability data directly to its network of institutional clients, turning the platform’s crowdsourced sentiment into a packaged financial product.
For Polymarket founder and CEO Shayne Coplan, the ICE deal represents a watershed moment of institutional validation. He characterized the partnership as “a major step in bringing prediction markets into the financial mainstream,” signaling a departure from the platform’s niche, crypto-native origins.
The development follows Polymarket’s return to the U.S. market earlier this year after a regulatory hiatus. In 2022, the platform was effectively pushed offshore by federal authorities for continuing to allow U.S.-based traders despite a settlement with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Polymarket regained a domestic foothold by acquiring QCX, a lesser-known derivatives exchange, shortly after prosecutors closed an investigation into the company’s prior operations. The move also brought Donald Trump Jr. onto Polymarket’s advisory board.

Macro analyst Luke Gromen’s comments come amid an ongoing debate over whether Bitcoin or Ether is the more attractive long-term option for traditional investors. Macro analyst Luke Gromen says the fact that Bitcoin doesn’t natively earn yield isn’t a weakness; it’s what makes it a safer store of value.“If you’re earning a yield, you are taking a risk,” Gromen told Natalie Brunell on the Coin Stories podcast on Wednesday, responding to a question about critics who dismiss Bitcoin (BTC) because they prefer yield-earning assets.“Anyone who says that is showing their Western financial privilege,” he added.Read more

