The Maduro Polymarket bet is not "obviously insider trading"
the numbers mason!
So, if you havenāt heard the news, America deposed Maduro, and a fresh polymarket account bet on it happening and made ~$320k in profit.
Seems suspicious right! And yeah! The media, expectedly, went hogwild.
And look, I agree, I smell the same stench all of you do, but that doesnāt mean that this is not an āobvious case of insider tradingā, as some twitterers, redditors, youtubers and even news outlets have claimed. Today I want to make the case that this is not an obvious conclusion!1
Full story of the polymarket account
The account bought shares in 3 prediction markets:2
Maduro out by January 31 (bought at 7-11 cents)
US forces in Venezuela by January 31
Trump invokes war powers against Venezuela by January 31
The first market was resolved to yes, since well, heās out. This is where the majority of the profits were made.
The others have not been resolved yet. Yet this person sold! If this person had perfect information, as has been suggested, it would be very irrational to sell these shares before the market resolves.
Also, notice the rates at which he bought. Itās not like polymarket broadly believed this to be impossible at all. 10 cents means that the market thinks the odds of this happening are around 10%. You could explain this with even more insider trading. But maybe not! Maybe, in some ways, a lot of the signs were quite obvious.
āTrump has repeatedly told the media that Maduroās days in power are numbered.ā
The above quote is from december 31st.
And if you think that this is so obviously insider trading and this person is obviously so sure, then why only bet 80k? I canāt really imagine a guy close enough to trump that he would have this amount of intel yet not have more than 80k in the bank to gamble with. And I donāt think the argument of āany more would be suspiciousā really holds either here, betting $800k or $80k is about as suspicious, at the very least, the wins would outpace the odds of trouble.
I think if what we were seeing was genuine insider trading, it would likely look a lot more like ābuys shares at $0.01 way in advance for oddly specific dateā, sells when market resolves. And as I said, thatās not what happened.
Now, why is it a fresh account? I donāt know! But again, itās not immediately obvious that āthis is a fresh accountā ā“ ācovering up insider tradingā. It could be someone making that trade that doesnāt want to be seen doing it publicly, for personal reasons. Or just someone using polymarket for the first time!
Edges are naturally weird
An āedgeā is information in the market that your competitors donāt have access to, or havenāt discovered. This is what those people at jane street do all day. They find edges and exploit them.
Anyone working in finance will tell you that getting an āedgeā can be very bizzare stuff. Things like how shadows cast on oil barrels (I think), tracking the number of pizzas going to the white house, etcā¦
Itās definitely possible that this person had some sort of edge, without it having been insider trading.
An estimate
Now, let me be a nerd for a minute alright, thereās a theorem for this! And in this specific case, we donāt have to vaguely allude to bayes theorem, we can actually run the numbers for once!3
So, 4 suspicious things happened here at once! Iāll make conservative estimates for the probability of all of them.
Someone
bet a lot of money on a newsworthy event (letās say, 50 yearly newsworthy events, with 10 big bets per event)
on a fresh account (M) (p = 0.15, as I said, many reasons to do this on a fresh account )
on a tightly timed bet (p = 0.15, a bit more suspicious, but not implausible given polymarket is relatively high frequency)
So, even in a world with zero insider trading, how often would we expect to see something like this?
In other words, even with zero insider trading, you should expect about one eerily perfect-looking trade per year.
Not impossible!
Conclusions
There are many good arguments for this being merely a coincidence. Not every suspicious polymarket account is insider trading.
That being said, do I think it was insider trading? I mean, probably, the trump administration has shown that they care way less about this sort of behavior. But on the whole, Iām not dismissing the null hypothesis here. Nothing ever happens.
This post could have been way longer, feel free to add nuance in comments, but I have exams right now, so I mustnāt get nerdsniped
much more detective work to be done here, feel free
using bayes with a prior for insider trading is probably better, but I cba today, as I said, exams.
imperfect if there was actual insider trading, but polymarket is just very good otherwise, so hard to decide probability in a different way.
Notice how he didnāt outright win the other 2 markets by the way!







Also didnāt someone say it leaked to the NYT and WaPo anyway (I think my source for this is a Hasan Piker tweet so unclear if true). Doesnāt seem like this is worse.
Prediction markets are meant to have insider trading! I am begging people to understand that prediction markets encourage insider trading and this is _THE_ point!
It's probably not just people who were super close to Trump who knew about it ahead of time? You'd have to assume some people in the intelligence/military had more info (even if it wasn't super precise per se), maybe whoever the CIA's contacts inside the Maduro regime were, maybe even some foreign intelligence agencies that were good at predicting this kind of thing? Otherwise I agree with your conclusion.