The Perils of Prediction

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If you want to place a bet that the Sun will not rise tomorrow, or (less likely) that the Cleveland Browns will dominate the next Super Bowl, you can turn to the prediction platform called Polymarket.  People who believe something will happen—literally anything—can make a bet, like the $200 million wagered on whether Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky would wear a suit at his next meeting, or the $1.3 million that was bet on whether Donald Trump would say the word ‘hottest’ during a recent meeting with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer.  Speculative markets have emerged for the return of Jesus Christ, the existence of aliens and whether the Earth is flat.

Polymarket has become a surefire way to determine whether your judgment about what’s going on, and what is going to be going on, is better or worse than the wisdom of the crowd.  But, like most gambling activities, the majority of the trades and traders have lost money.  A very small number of people can boast that they consistently have better judgment than the rest of us; according to one study, the top 1% of Polymarket accounts have gathered roughly three-quarters of the gains.

This is in line with other  betting markets.  In one study, 1.3% of daily fantasy sports bettors took in 91% of the total profits.  97% of Brazilian retail futures traders lose money; U.S. retail equity options traders lose 5% to 9% per earnings announcement trade.  And there is evidence that some of the winners have had access to information not available to the rest of us; insider trading on Polymarket has provoked a federal indictment and a Congressional probe.

So, what’s the lesson here?  If there is a conclusion beyond the perils of gambling, it is that the wisdom of the crowd, for all the disparate voices it includes, tends to be wiser than all but a very few of us on pretty much everything.  The Sun is likely to rise tomorrow, any bet you make on the hour and day of the Second Coming is likely to be a loser, and index funds will continue to beat the cumulative bets made by active traders.

This article was written by an independent writer for Brewster Financial Planning LLC and is not intended as individualized legal or investment advice.