The crypto markets that saw traders rake in fortunes from betting on a Trump victory
- as mystery French financier 'makes $85million' from the Donald's election win
The crypto markets that saw traders rake in fortunes from betting on a Trump victory - as mystery French
financier 'makes $85million' from the Donald's election win
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By ELENA SALVONI
Published: 12:10 GMT, 11 November 2024 | Updated: 12:13 GMT, 11 November 2024
Traders who placed bets on a victory for Donald Trump in the US election have raked in huge sums on the
cryptocurrency trading platform Polymarket, including one anonymous financier who made an estimated
$85million.
The crypto betting site beat the pollsters and 'called the election before anything else', its
26-year-old founder Shayne Coplan declared on November 6.
Among those who reaped the biggest rewards from the result was the so-called 'Trump Whale', a French
national who calls himself Théo.
The financier relied on predictions from niche 'neighbour polls', including ones he commissioned
himself, meaning he effectively bet against the accuracy of US polling data.
He was so confident that the Republican would win the race that he reportedly staked $30 million of his
own money on it, at the same time as Polymarket contradicted traditional polls by swinging heavily in
favour of a Trump victory.
The crypto entrepreneur - a New York University dropout - boasted that his app had helped Musk and
others 'to go to bed early on election night' due to its 'early call'
A screenshot of the Polymarket odds predicting Trump's victory
The 'Trump Whale' was so confident that the Republican would win the race that he reportedly staked $30
million of his own money on it
According to the financier, traditional polls failed to account for the 'shy Trump voter effect' -
voters who supported the former president but who were not willing to share their views publicly or with
pollsters.
When he placed his bets, the odds of Trump winning were 40 per cent, but his bet was by no means based
on a gut feeling, he told the Wall Street Journal.
He had commissioned his own surveys to measure what is known as the 'neighbour effect' - asking people
not who they are voting for but who they think those next door are.
Théo slammed the polls put out by mainstream media outlets, saying they underestimated Trump and were
skewed in favour of the Democrats.
'In France this is different!! The pollster credibility is more important: they want to be as close as
possible to the actual results. Culture is different on this,' he told reporters.
Many election watchers kept their eyes on Polymarket during the race for the White House, with the odds
splashed across X and shared by Elon Musk as evidence of momentum for Trump.
'More accurate than polls, as actual money is on the line,' Musk said on X in October, sharing the
latest data from Coplan's app.
The crypto entrepreneur - a New York University dropout - boasted that his app had helped Musk and
others 'to go to bed early on election night' due to its 'early call'.
'The night of the election, Polymarket was the first destination to convey that Trump had won,' he told
CNBC. 'It was a good two, three hours ahead of the media.'
'On Polymarket it looked like a done deal, and if you were just watching TV, you would think it's neck
and neck,' says Polymarket CEO Shayne Caplan on the platform's early call for Trump on Election Day.
Despite endorsements from high-profile Trump backers Musk and Peter Thiel, who was among investors who
helped the platform raise $70million this year, Coplan has insisted that Polymarket is 'strictly
non-partisan'.
Writing on X, he said the site is 'not about politics. The vision never was to be a political website,
and it still isn't'.
While traders on Polymarket went the right way betting on Trump's victory, most favoured Harris to win
the popular vote - which he went on to win.
Betting on Polymarket surged as traders rushed to wager on the US presidential election, with more than
$3.6 billion in trading volume for predictions on the winner, according to data shared by the platform.
Bookmakers have bet on the outcomes of elections for centuries - Polymarket is different because it
operates as more of a financial exchange, with traders buying and selling digital contracts with one
another.
While gambling markets have historically been effective at indicating election results, they have on
occasion been dramatically wrong, including during the Brexit vote in 2016.
The site has humble beginnings, with Coplan sharing a photo of his 'office' four years ago which was
actually in his bathroom, with his laptop resting on a washing basket
Polymarket and other betting platforms have quickly emerged as a way to legally put money on elections
and gauge who's ahead, after successive cycles in which pollster forecasts crashed and burned.
How Shayne Copland's startup Polymarket beat the polls to predict Donald Trump's win
People place 'trades' on a candidate and get a payout if they back the correct outcome. More and bigger
bets on a front-runner raise that candidate's odds, while at the same time reducing peoples' returns.
Tarek Mansour, CEO of betting platform Kalshi, said the results validated his fledgling industry, which
predicted a Harris defeat weeks earlier - and also correctly called the race for Trump before the major
news networks early on Wednesday morning.
'The markets were right. The markets outperformed,' Mansour told DailyMail.com.
'The markets are going to be the thing that people look at next cycle. They're not going back.'
Donald Trump with wife, Melania, and son Barron on Election night. The prediction markets eyed Trump's
lead among voters ahead of the polls
The markets are 'not a crystal ball,' Mansour said, but are better than pollsters at pulling together
the wisdom of the crowd.
It quickly became clear that the betting markets were on the money.
Polling, which involves canvassing voters about how they plan to vote and then processing that data, had
suggested a tight race, including in the seven swing states that decided the contest.
But they undercounted Trump's support nationwide, and by as much as four percentage points in such
battlegrounds as North Carolina, Nevada and Arizona, as of the count on Friday.
Donald Trump
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The crypto markets that saw traders rake in fortunes from betting on a Trump victory - as mystery French
financier 'makes $85million' from the Donald's election win
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