Q1 2026 was rough for crypto exchanges. Trading volumes were compressed by geopolitical uncertainty and months of sideways price action. Coinbase and Robinhood both faced questions about whether they could sustain growth in a flat market.
Cantor Fitzgerald analysts published a note this week answering that question — and the answer has almost nothing to do with Bitcoin spot trading.
Cantor Fitzgerald analysts said the market is treating recent trading slumps as old news, shifting focus instead toward prediction markets and new product launches to drive the next leg of growth for Coinbase and Robinhood.
Here's what's actually happening. Prediction markets — platforms where users bet real money on real-world outcomes — have become the fastest-growing product in both companies' portfolios. Users aren't trading Bitcoin. They're trading probabilities: Will Iran sign a ceasefire? Will the CLARITY Act pass? Will BTC be above $80K by May 1st? Will Tesla announce Bitcoin purchases on Thursday's earnings call?
The market for this product is enormous. Polymarket, the dominant standalone prediction platform, has processed over $8 billion in volume in 2026 alone. When Coinbase and Robinhood integrate prediction markets natively into their existing user interfaces — alongside stocks, ETFs, and crypto — they're putting that product in front of a combined user base of over 50 million people who already have verified accounts and linked bank accounts.
The friction removal is the key insight. Polymarket requires a crypto wallet and stablecoin deposit — a significant barrier for mainstream users. Coinbase and Robinhood prediction markets require nothing new from existing customers.
The lawsuit arrived the same day as the Cantor note. New York sued Coinbase and Gemini over prediction market offerings, arguing that prediction market contracts touching on sports and entertainment violate state gambling laws. Fortune Both stocks dropped sharply. COIN fell 6.3%. HOOD fell 4.5%.
Here's the honest picture: the New York lawsuit creates real near-term risk. If courts side with the state, prediction markets in sports and entertainment get shut down in New York — the largest financial market in the US. That's not a minor setback.
But Cantor's thesis is about the broader category, not just sports. Political events, financial outcomes, macroeconomic indicators — none of those fall under gambling law. That's where the real growth is happening, and that product isn't going anywhere.
The bet Coinbase and Robinhood are making: that prediction markets become the dominant retail financial product of the next five years. Based on what I'm seeing in engagement data, they might be right.
#Coinbase #Robinhood #PredictionMarkets #Polymarket #CryptoGrowth