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Bernstein predicts that the volume of prediction markets could grow significantly from $51 billion by 2025 to as much as $1 trillion by 2030. They also forecast that the industry’s revenue could well exceed $10 billion. The report suggests that platforms such as Robinhood and Coinbase might turn out to be the major distributors of prediction markets, envisioning a time when regulated derivative exchanges and fintech applications that offer event-based trading could become a standard part of the range of financial products.
For those professionals who work in the crypto and blockchain industries, the report points to how decentralization through infrastructure, smart contracts, and seamless compliance through gateways may help prediction markets grow into a primary sector of digital assets.
Growth Trajectory from $51B to $1T Volumes
Bernstein’s projection leads to $51 billion volume in 2025 and then up to $1 trillion in 2030, indicating that there will be quite fast acceptance of prediction markets not only within crypto-native but also regulated venues.
Prediction markets allow people to wager on the outcome of real-world events by using blockchains for settlement and oracle networks for verifying results. To reach a figure of $1 trillion, there would have to be an increase in liquidity, more effective dispute mechanisms, and layer-2 solutions to facilitate very high-volume trading.
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Robinhood and Coinbase as Distributing Channels
This research paper points toward Robinhood and Coinbase as two major distribution channels. Each of them is capable of wielding a large network of retail users. They both are online brokerages regulated under the law, and they provide a direct exchange system of fiat currencies that would make entering prediction markets easy.
Prediction markets will grow to $1 trillion by 2030, Bernstein estimates via @CNBC:https://t.co/7b2t5ac1na
The investment bank said volumes will reach an estimated $240 billion in 2026 and grow at a 80% compound annual rate between 2025 and 2030.— 🌊💙 Viking Resistance 💙🌊 (@BlueCrewViking) April 14, 2026
Coinbase’s integration of on-chain and Base provides the technical interface to decentralized places, and at the same time, Robinhood’s exposure to event contracts and options leaves a blueprint for risk disclosures and compliance. Connecting the dots might be based on getting licensing for specific jurisdictions and matching derivative or gaming rules.
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Moving Forward
$1 trillion might mean that more instruments for hedging macro and event risks will be made available, along with an increase in stablecoin settlement demand, and the emergence of new uses for oracles and Web3 data feeds. Institutional involvement could go up should the contracts match the compliance and auditability requirements.
On the other hand, challenges are myriad. They include regulatory characterizations, oracle dependency, the ability to resist manipulation, and liquidity divisions across chains. Market fairness will be underpinned by how transparent the sources from which resolutions come and what safeguards are in place for users.
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About Ananthyka J
Ananthyka J is a market reporter at Tronweekly, reporting on cryptocurrency news. She covers cryptocurrency markets, blockchain technology, and digital asset regulation, focusing on Bitcoin, Ethereum, DeFi, altcoins, and crypto policy. Her reporting emphasizes clear and accurate market coverage, including crypto market movements, regulatory developments, and blockchain adoption. She holds a BA in Journalism and Mass Communication and an MA in Communication and Media Studies. She has also completed multiple media internships, follows strict editorial and fact-checking standards, and discloses potential conflicts of interest when reporting.

