Just caught something interesting. Looks like the old guard on Wall Street is finally paying attention to prediction markets. Schwab's CEO Rick Wurster basically confirmed they're seriously looking at getting into this space, though they're being pretty selective about it.



Here's the thing though - Wurster made it clear Schwab won't be touching sports betting, politics, or anything that looks like pure gambling. They're positioning this as a wealth-building tool, not a casino. That's actually a smart move given the regulatory heat these platforms have been taking. Kalshi and Polymarket exploded to like $23.6 billion in combined monthly volume back in March, but they've also had state regulators coming after them for unlicensed sports betting. Federal lawmakers are also eyeing them over insider trading concerns.

Schwab's angle is different though. They want prediction markets tied to things that actually matter for investors - economic outcomes, market events, that kind of thing. Wurster basically said if it doesn't fit their wealth management narrative, they're not interested. Smart positioning.

Meanwhile, Citadel Securities is keeping their options open. Jim Esposito said they're watching the space develop but acknowledged liquidity isn't really there yet. However, he sees potential once the market scales up. Citadel's also avoiding sports entirely, but they're interested in event contracts - specifically things like election contracts that could help clients hedge portfolio risks.

The more I think about it, this could actually be the legitimacy play prediction markets needed. When firms like Schwab and Citadel start treating this seriously, it shifts the whole narrative from speculation to actual risk management. That's the kind of infrastructure that could actually make these markets stick around.
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