The world’s largest prediction market is opening a new frontier for speculators: the real estate industry. Polymarket and Parcl have joined forces to let traders wager on whether home prices in the major U.S. cities will rise or fall.
The partnership will connect Polymarket, a secure, blockchain-based platform where people make bets on future outcomes with Parcl, which independently tracks and updates home price indexes every day.
Anyone can now place bets on whether house prices in places like New York or Los Angeles will be higher or lower at the end of a month, a quarter, or a full year. The winners are decided using real, verified price data, without doing any guesswork.
A Faster Way to Trade Real Estate
Real estate is the world’s biggest investment category—worth more than stocks, bonds, or anything else. But getting exposure to it usually means buying actual properties, taking out big loans, and tying up money for years.
These new prediction markets change that completely: now anyone can bet on whether home prices in major cities will rise or fall, and profit from those moves—without ever owning a single house.
“Prediction markets work best when the data is clear, and the outcome can be verified without debate,” said Matthew Modabber, Polymarket’s chief marketing officer. “Parcl’s daily housing indices give us a strong foundation to launch housing markets that settle transparently and consistently.”
Trevor Bacon, Parcl’s chief executive, framed the collaboration as part of a wider shift in how markets communicate information. “Parcl is the source of truth for real estate pricing, and we believe real estate should be a major category within the prediction-market ecosystem,” Bacon said.
Market Performance and Expansion Plans
The partners will roll out markets in stages, starting with major metros where there’s likely to be the most action, then branching out as interest picks up. They will create standard templates for each market to keep things consistent across different cities and times.
The bigger goal is to make housing trends less opaque and more understandable for regular people. There are plenty of unknowns, but combining solid price data with a structured marketplace could give people a different way to get involved with housing beyond just buying property or other such ways.