Charles Schwab Brings Prediction-Market Style Options to Retail Investors

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Charles Schwab is preparing to launch a new set of binary options tied to the performance of the S&P 500 through a partnership with Cboe Global Markets.The products will allow Schwab clients to take simple yes-or-no positions on whether the index reaches a specified outcome. If the condition is met, the contract pays a fixed amount. If not, it expires worthless.Schwab executives have previously criticised prediction markets, particularly contracts tied to sports and entertainment events. CEO Rick Wurster has argued that such products blur the line between gambling and investing.“I really worry about the message that’s being sent to young investors that you’ve got to get these quick hits,” he said in an extensive interview with The Wall Street Journal in December.Now Schwab is introducing a product that uses a similar binary payoff structure, albeit within a traditional options-market framework and tied to a financial benchmark rather than a real-world event.How the Product WorksSchwab is taking a narrower route than prediction-market platforms. The contracts are linked to the S&P 500 and operate within established exchange and options-market infrastructure rather than as standalone event contracts.The structure allows Schwab to offer a simpler retail trading product without entering the sports, politics, or entertainment markets that have generated much of the controversy around prediction platforms.The company will use a newer payout model developed by Cboe, including a feature called the “Plus Zone.”Traditional binary contracts typically result in either a fixed payout or a total loss. Unlike traditional binary contracts, the structure allows traders to receive partial payouts even when they miss the exact target level. What It Means for BrokersSchwab's change of heart highlights how retail demand for simple outcome-based trading products is spreading beyond dedicated prediction-market venues.Wurster recently acknowledged that offering these types of products has become a “competitive necessity” as firms such as Robinhood and Interactive Brokers expand their own event-style trading offerings.The use of Cboe’s options framework gives established brokers a way to respond to changing retail preferences without building separate prediction-market businesses or relying on new regulatory structures.Schwab’s launch suggests that yes-or-no trading experiences are not unique to prediction market platforms. Similar mechanics are increasingly being packaged through existing options-market infrastructure, bringing them into the mainstream brokerage product stack.This article was written by Tanya Chepkova at www.financemagnates.com.