Prediction market platform Polymarket has launched a new category of contracts tied to private-company milestones through an exclusive partnership with Nasdaq Private Market, expanding the use of prediction markets beyond politics, sports and cryptocurrencies into private capital markets.
The new offering allows users to trade on outcomes linked to privately held startups, including valuation milestones, IPO timelines and secondary-market activity. Nasdaq Private Market (NPM) will serve as the official data provider responsible for resolving the contracts using its transaction and liquidity data from private-company share programs.
The launch comes as investor attention increasingly shifts toward private markets, where many technology startups now remain private for longer periods before going public. According to industry estimates referenced by the companies, nearly 1,600 unicorn startups globally hold a combined valuation exceeding $5 trillion.
Unlike traditional private-market investing, Polymarket’s contracts do not provide direct ownership in startup equity. Instead, users speculate on whether a particular event or milestone will occur, with contract prices reflecting market expectations about those outcomes.
The expansion marks one of the first large-scale attempts to combine prediction-market infrastructure with private-market data, potentially creating a new form of price discovery around venture-backed companies.
We’re excited to announce our exclusive partnership with Nasdaq Private Market.
Retail traders can now get exposure to private companies, one of the historically most profitable asset classes, exclusively through Polymarket. pic.twitter.com/ThotQNwlzW
— Polymarket (@Polymarket) May 19, 2026
Private markets attract broader investor attention
Private-company investing has historically been limited to institutional investors, venture-capital firms and accredited individuals due to regulatory and liquidity constraints. However, rising valuations among venture-backed firms such as OpenAI, SpaceX and Stripe have increased public interest in gaining exposure to companies before they reach public stock exchanges.
At the same time, delayed IPO activity has pushed more value creation into private markets. Many late-stage startups continue relying on secondary share sales and private funding rounds instead of pursuing public listings, leading investors to seek alternative indicators of company performance and market sentiment.
Nasdaq Private Market operates secondary liquidity programs that enable startup employees and early investors to sell shares before IPOs. The company said it has facilitated nearly $80 billion in private-market liquidity transactions across more than 1,000 company-sponsored programs.
By integrating that data into Polymarket’s platform, the companies aim to create contracts based on verifiable market activity rather than speculative or unstructured information sources. The growing momentum in alternative finance also comes as headlines such as Zetrix AI raises $40 million ahead of Nasdaq listing continue drawing investor attention toward private technology firms preparing for public-market debuts.
Prediction markets continue expanding beyond politics and crypto
Prediction markets have grown significantly over the past two years as users increasingly trade contracts tied to elections, economic events, sports and digital assets. Platforms such as Polymarket gained mainstream attention during major political events, where trading activity often surged ahead of traditional polling or forecasting models.
The company’s move into private-company markets may also help diversify platform activity beyond politically driven trading cycles and cryptocurrency speculation. Recent developments surrounding Polymarket removes missing US pilot market also highlighted how the platform continues adapting its market structure in response to community feedback and regulatory attention.
Industry analysts say the partnership reflects a broader convergence between alternative financial platforms and private-market infrastructure providers. Some fintech startups and blockchain firms have previously explored synthetic exposure to private-company valuations, though regulatory uncertainty around securities laws has slowed broader adoption.
Market participants are also watching whether prediction-market pricing can emerge as a meaningful sentiment indicator for venture-backed firms. While secondary share transactions already provide some insight into startup valuations, prediction contracts may offer additional real-time signals on investor expectations surrounding IPO timing, fundraising conditions and company performance.
FAQs
1. What are Polymarket’s new private-company prediction markets?
The new markets allow users to trade contracts based on outcomes tied to private companies, including valuation milestones, IPO timing and secondary-market activity. Users speculate on whether an event will happen rather than purchasing company shares directly.
2. Does trading on Polymarket provide ownership in private startups?
No. The contracts do not represent equity ownership or direct investment in private companies. They function as prediction-based financial contracts tied to specific events or milestones.
3. What role does Nasdaq Private Market play in the partnership?
Nasdaq Private Market provides the transaction and secondary-market data used to resolve contracts on Polymarket. The company specializes in liquidity programs and private-market infrastructure for venture-backed firms and investors.
4. Why are private-company markets gaining attention?
Many technology startups are remaining private for longer periods while reaching multi-billion-dollar valuations. This has increased demand for alternative ways to track investor sentiment and potential future outcomes linked to private companies.








