What happens when crypto traders can bet on CPI, Fed cuts, and oil 24/7?


What happens when crypto traders can bet on CPI, Fed cuts, and oil 24/7?


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Hyperliquid launched a prediction market this week tied directly to the May US CPI year-over-year reading.

Intercontinental Exchange, the owner of the New York Stock Exchange, announced a partnership with OKX to roll out oil futures contracts that never expire, putting ICE’s Brent and WTI benchmarks in a crypto product with 24/7 trading.

Polymarket, whose prediction markets have recorded nearly $39 billion in US volume so far in 2026, launched a suite of private-company contracts tied to valuation milestones at OpenAI, SpaceX, Anthropic, and Anduril.

Collectively, these represent something much more systematic than just individual product launches: crypto exchanges are moving into tradfi. These three launches (and there’s bound to be more soon) are turning the macro calendar into a live retail trading product collateralized in stablecoins and available for trading around the clock.

Macro data as a consumer product

Prediction markets turn binary questions into prices: a contract might ask whether CPI lands above a specific threshold, or whether a private company reaches a set valuation by year-end. When a contract trades at 43 cents, the market’s expressing roughly a 43% probability for that outcome, with the usual caveats around liquidity, participant mix, and settlement rules.

Perpetual futures let traders maintain ongoing synthetic exposure to an asset or benchmark without a fixed expiry date, using funding payments to keep the contract price anchored near the underlying reference. In crypto, perps became the default instrument for leveraged Bitcoin exposure, and we’re now seeing that same design applied to macro assets long confined to institutional terminals and regulated commodity exchanges.

The OKX and ICE partnership shows just how far that application has traveled. ICE’s Brent and WTI benchmark prices will underpin these never-expiring contracts available across territories where OKX is already licensed to offer perpetual futures, giving OKX’s 120 million retail traders access to energy benchmark products that previously required a commodity brokerage account.

The announcement came as Hyperliquid’s oil perps were already generating roughly $1.6 billion in daily trading volume, a figure large enough to push CME and ICE to press US regulators to pay closer attention to these offshore exchanges.

Hyperliquid’s CPI market takes these even further. Inflation prints already move Bitcoin: traders watch the number, compare it with consensus expectations, then reprice the Fed path, the dollar, yields, equities, gold, and crypto in rapid sequence.

Hyperliquid launched the May CPI year-over-year market with contracts pricing roughly a 43% probability for a reading below 4.3%, settling against the BLS release on June 10. Trading volume at launch was modest, around $3,274.

However, the most interesting data point here is the design itself: crypto exchanges are testing whether official data releases can become reusable market templates, the same way Bitcoin perps became the default for nearly every other crypto derivative.

Polymarket’s private-company expansion addresses a different market gap: most of the world’s most valuable companies can’t be traded by retail investors.

The platform launched 23 markets in its first batch, covering contracts on whether OpenAI surpasses a $1 trillion valuation by year-end, whether Anthropic exceeds $500 billion, and whether SpaceX completes an IPO before 2027, all resolved against Nasdaq Private Market data. Traders have priced Anthropic at roughly 90% probability of hitting $1 trillion by December 31, 2026, and OpenAI at 76% odds of reaching $900 billion by the same date.

These are event-based contracts structured around whether an outcome occurs, with Nasdaq Private Market making the underlying valuation data publicly available for free as part of the deal, creating a real-time probability layer on companies that have raised tens of billions without a single public filing.

Comic-style crypto subway scene showing traders boarding a Bitcoin train amid CPI, Fed rate cut, oil, and valuation signals.Comic-style crypto subway scene showing traders boarding a Bitcoin train amid CPI, Fed rate cut, oil, and valuation signals.

When the regulatory framework hasn’t caught up with crypto

We’re now seeing product development running laps around the legal architecture, and it’s creating friction across multiple jurisdictions. The CFTC sued Minnesota this month after the state passed the first explicit statutory ban on prediction markets, criminalizing their operation as a felony under state law.

The CFTC called it the most aggressive state-level incursion into federally regulated markets in the agency’s history. CFTC Chair Michael Selig said the law would turn lawful crypto operators into felons overnight, while Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison countered that prediction markets prey on young people and low-income communities.

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