Polymarket Polices Insider Trading as Lucrative Military Bets Raise Suspicions
Polymarket users have a 52% rate of winning long-shot wagers on military actions, a nonprofit research group recently found. That’s better than the likelihood of predicting a coin flip correctly, which, fun fact, is 51% because thumbs have a slightly biased wobble favoring the side the coin starts on.
The Anti-Corruption Data Collective found that defense-related long-shot wagers, meaning bets of more than $2,500 on odds at or below 35%, won more than half of the time. Those are oddly good odds considering that, more generally on the platform, a paper found the top 1% of traders have historically raked in three-quarters of its profits.
As scrutiny of war-related trades intensifies, Polymarket said on Thursday it’ll introduce new features to monitor its platform.
Prediction markets let users bet on everything from how many EVs Tesla will deliver to whether the Rapture will happen this year. (Who’s going to pay that one out?) They’ve existed in a legal gray area since their inception. Amid a discussion about what counts as gambling that’s more tense than an election-year Thanksgiving dinner, Polymarket’s ramping up its efforts to police insider trading. Its crackdown will look different than it does for traditional financial companies, though:
Playing Nice: Polymarket’s the world’s largest prediction market, and as it gains users, not all of them have good intentions. The blockchain-based platform was booted from the US by regulators before making a comeback late last year. Now, it’s trying to buddy up to them, while still defending the legitimacy of its core business. It’s also facing increasing competition, including Wall Street titans like Robinhood and, possibly soon, the on-chain heavyhitter Hyperliquid.
As scrutiny of war-related trades intensifies, Polymarket said on Thursday it’ll introduce new features to monitor its platform.
Prediction markets let users bet on everything from how many EVs Tesla will deliver to whether the Rapture will happen this year. (Who’s going to pay that one out?) They’ve existed in a legal gray area since their inception. Amid a discussion about what counts as gambling that’s more tense than an election-year Thanksgiving dinner, Polymarket’s ramping up its efforts to police insider trading. Its crackdown will look different than it does for traditional financial companies, though:
Playing Nice: Polymarket’s the world’s largest prediction market, and as it gains users, not all of them have good intentions. The blockchain-based platform was booted from the US by regulators before making a comeback late last year. Now, it’s trying to buddy up to them, while still defending the legitimacy of its core business. It’s also facing increasing competition, including Wall Street titans like Robinhood and, possibly soon, the on-chain heavyhitter Hyperliquid.
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