The rapidly expanding prediction markets sector is drawing fresh attention after the recent polymarket acquisition of infrastructure provider Brahma, underscoring the race to build scalable trading rails.
Prediction markets platform Polymarket announced on Wednesday that it has acquired Brahma, a financial infrastructure firm focused on real-time execution and settlement for high-volume digital asset and fintech transactions. The deal brings Brahma’s team and technology into Polymarket as the platform seeks to expand its product suite.
In an emailed press release, Polymarket said Brahma has “quickly become an industry leader in building and developing programmable systems across blockchain systems, trading execution, and payments.” Moreover, the company highlighted Brahma’s experience with complex, high-throughput systems across multiple networks.
“Building reliable infrastructure across blockchain networks and traditional financial rails is hard 22there are no shortcuts,” said Shayne Coplan, Polymarket CEO and founder. He added that the Brahma team has demonstrated an ability to “design, operate, and scale complex products for sophisticated users,” a capability Polymarket wants to embed as it grows.
Coplan noted that as Polymarket’s user base and markets expand, the company is “intentionally adding teams that have already solved difficult problems and can execute at a very high level.” However, a Polymarket spokesperson told CoinDesk that the terms of the agreement are not being disclosed.
Brahma separately confirmed on Wednesday that Polymarket acquired its DeFi infrastructure, with the transaction designed to integrate Brahma’s team and systems into the prediction markets company. The move is framed as a way to help Polymarket scale its infrastructure suite and enhance its market capabilities.
“With this acquisition, our team and our technology live on, to help scale Polymarket and its ecosystem,” the Brahma team said in a post on X. “Our mission to build at the core of crypto continues.” That said, the company will discontinue all of its existing products in the coming weeks.
Brahma stated that it has processed more than $1 billion in transaction volume and over $100 million in total value locked. Despite that scale, every current offering, including Brahma Accounts, Agents and Swype.fun, will be phased out within 30 days. Users have been instructed to migrate their funds and positions via the firm’s website and community channels.
The wind-down marks a significant shift for Brahma’s existing customer base. However, the company emphasized that its core engineering and product expertise will transition into Polymarket, rather than disappear from the market entirely.
The polymarket acquisition of Brahma is positioned as a strategic step to reinforce the platform’s underlying infrastructure, particularly around execution speed and settlement reliability. As Polymarket’s volumes rise, robust back-end systems are critical for handling large flows of orders and payouts in real time.
The acquisition brings Brahma’s engineers and infrastructure stack under the Polymarket umbrella, where they will focus on enhancing the platform’s trading rails and broadening its product range. Moreover, the integration is expected to strengthen Polymarket’s ability to support more markets tied to global events, sports and politics.
Earlier this month, reports surfaced that Polymarket was in early talks for potential fundraising rounds that could lift its 2025 valuation to about $20 billion. The discussions remain preliminary and may not lead to finalized investments, but they highlight investor interest in high-growth prediction market platforms.
Prediction markets allow users to trade contracts linked to real-world outcomes, including elections, sports results and macroeconomic events. Traders buy and sell contracts based on their expectations, with prices reflecting the implied probability of various scenarios. Over the past few years, the sector has expanded significantly.
Major trading and brokerage platforms such as Coinbase and Robinhood have shown growing interest in event-based markets and on-chain trading products. Moreover, regulatory developments in the United States and other jurisdictions have intensified debates about how these markets should be supervised.
Within this backdrop, Polymarket is positioning itself as a leading venue for on-chain event markets. The integration of Brahma’s execution and settlement technology could bolster its ability to compete with larger, more established financial players moving into the same space.
For Brahma customers, the immediate priority is operational. The firm has given users a 30-day window to exit products and migrate assets, using the guidance posted on its official website and community channels. However, there has been no indication that users will receive dedicated migration tools beyond existing interfaces.
On Polymarket’s side, the acquired team is expected to focus on scaling infrastructure to support additional markets, higher throughput and potentially new product lines. Moreover, the company is likely to leverage Brahma’s experience in handling high-volume digital asset flows to improve reliability and user experience across its platform.
Overall, the deal brings together a fast-growing prediction markets operator and a specialist in programmable financial systems, signaling a broader trend toward consolidation as crypto-native platforms race to build institutional-grade infrastructure.


