Coinbase has agreed to acquire The Clearing Company, a startup focused on building infrastructure for regulated prediction markets, as part of its broader expansion beyond spot cryptocurrency trading.
The acquisition, announced by Coinbase in a blog post, is expected to close in early 2026, subject to customary conditions. Financial terms were not disclosed. Coinbase said the deal will bring specialised engineering and market structure expertise into the company as it develops on-chain markets tied to real-world events.
Prediction markets allow users to trade contracts based on the outcome of events such as elections, economic data releases, or other measurable outcomes. Coinbase argues that these markets can improve price discovery and risk management when operated within a regulated framework.
According to Coinbase, The Clearing Company’s technology and team will help support the design, clearing, and settlement of event-based markets directly on blockchain infrastructure. The startup’s founder and staff are expected to join Coinbase following the completion of the transaction.
Part of a broader strategy
The acquisition aligns with Coinbase’s stated ambition to become a full-stack financial platform offering multiple asset classes on a single regulated interface. In recent months, the company has signalled plans to expand into derivatives, prediction markets, and tokenised financial products, alongside its core crypto trading business.
Coinbase has emphasised that future growth in digital finance will depend on combining on-chain settlement with compliance, consumer protections, and regulatory oversight. Prediction markets are presented as a natural extension of this strategy, particularly as interest grows in event-based trading linked to politics, economics, and global risk.
For European policymakers and regulators, the move highlights how large crypto firms are increasingly positioning themselves as market infrastructure providers rather than niche trading venues. This trend may intersect with ongoing debates around digital public money, market supervision, and the role of private platforms in future financial systems.
