MEXC, the crypto exchange known for its zero‑fee trading, announced the launch of Combo on 9 June 2026. The new product lets traders bundle up to 20 event outcomes into a single position, beginning with sports markets and a limited set of cryptocurrency price targets.

Unlike traditional prediction‑market contracts that use an order book to set prices, Combo adopts a request‑for‑quote (RFQ) model. Traders submit a request for a combined contract, and institutional liquidity partners provide a quote that incorporates the implied probabilities of each outcome, portfolio risk across the bundled events, and the liquidity available for the trade. The final price is therefore set by third‑party market makers rather than by direct matching of retail orders.

A Combo trade pays out only if every selected prediction is correct. If any single outcome is wrong, the entire position settles for zero. This all‑or‑nothing payoff structure, common in multi‑event betting, is new to centralized prediction‑market platforms. For example, a user could combine a bet on a World Cup match result with a forecast for Bitcoin’s price at a future date, and settle both within the same transaction.

MEXC’s move follows the launch of its zero‑fee prediction‑market platform in March 2026, which positioned the service as a direct competitor to specialized operators such as Kalshi and Polymarket. By offering zero trading and settlement fees, MEXC aimed to attract a broader user base. The RFQ pricing model is a key differentiator. According to a statement from MEXC’s spokesperson Usi, “Traditional prediction market platforms are primarily priced through order‑book‑based supply and demand.” Usi added that Combo’s pricing “takes into account portfolio risk across multiple events and available liquidity.” The exchange did not disclose the names of the liquidity providers, describing them only as professional quantitative trading and liquidity institutions that perform pricing and market‑making functions.

Combo’s introduction marks the first time a centralized exchange has offered multi‑event combination trading in a prediction‑market context. The feature expands the range of strategies available to traders who previously had to open separate positions for each event. By bundling outcomes, users can express broader views across sports and crypto markets while keeping transaction costs low.

At launch, Combo is limited to sports and selected cryptocurrency markets. MEXC has not yet announced plans to extend the product to other categories such as geopolitical or economic events, nor has it disclosed whether it will support automated or algorithmic trading for Combo contracts.

Regulatory context remains unchanged. MEXC’s prediction‑market platform operates under the same licensing framework that governs its spot and derivatives trading services. The exchange has not reported any regulatory actions or compliance issues related to Combo.

In summary, MEXC’s Combo product introduces a new way to trade prediction markets by allowing up to 20 outcomes to be combined into a single, all‑or‑nothing position. The RFQ‑based pricing model, supported by institutional liquidity partners, differentiates Combo from the order‑book models used by competitors. While the feature is currently limited to sports and a handful of crypto markets, the launch signals MEXC’s intent to broaden the scope of its prediction‑market offerings and to compete more aggressively with specialized platforms.

The exchange has not yet provided a roadmap for future upgrades or expansions of the Combo product. Traders and market observers will likely monitor MEXC’s activity for additional announcements regarding new event categories, liquidity provider disclosures, and potential regulatory developments that could affect the availability of multi‑event prediction trading.