March 21, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
SEC ‘Earnest’ About Finding Workable Crypto Policy, Commissioners Say at Roundtable Coinbase Could Be Near Multi-Billion Dollar Deal for Deribit: Bloomberg South Korea Plans Sanctions Against BitMEX, KuCoin, Others: Report Now Is the Time to Rally to Web3 Gaming German Regulator Identifies ‘Deficiencies’ in Ethena’s USDe, Orders Immediate Issuance Halt Weekly Recap: Markets Flat, an Industry Buoyant HK Asia Holdings Buys More Bitcoin in Hedge Against Depreciation of Fiat Currencies Crypto Whale Who Made Millions on Leverage Trading Is a Convicted Fraudster: ZachXBT U.S. Government Removes Tornado Cash Sanctions Crypto’s Fairshake PAC Backs Republicans With Last-Minute Cash in Florida Races

Polymarket is 90% Accurate in Predicting World Events: Research

It turns out Polymarket is a crystal ball, which can predict certain events with nearly 90% accuracy, according to a Dune dashboard compiled by New York City-based data scientist Alex McCullough.

McCullough studied Polymarket’s historical data and removed markets with probabilities above 90% or below 10% after outcomes were already known but not yet settled, to keep the analysis accurate, according to a Dune dashboard summary.

Polymarket slightly but consistently overestimates event probabilities across most ranges, potentially due to biases like acquiescence bias, herd mentality, low liquidity, and participant preference for high-risk bets, McCullough’s research found.

Longer-term markets, ones that ask bettors to consider an event far-out, look more accurate because they include many outcomes that are clearly unlikely, making predictions easier, McCullough explained in an interview with Polymarket’s The Oracle blog.

McCullough gives the example of Gavin Newsom becoming president (a question with $54 million in volume) during the last election to show that longer-term Polymarket markets often include obviously predictable outcomes, like Newsom clearly not winning, which boosts the platform’s accuracy numbers for these long-term predictions.

In contrast, head-to-head sports markets, which have fewer extreme outcomes such as long-shot presidential candidates, and a more balanced distribution, present a clearer representation of predictive accuracy, McCullough found, showing notable improvements in accuracy as events unfold and revealing periodic accuracy spikes.

Sports is a growing sector for Polymarket, with nearly $4.5 billion in collective volume wagered on the outcomes of the NBA, MLB, Champions League, and Premier League finals, according to data portal Polymarket Analytics.

McCullough’s findings about the accuracy of Polymarket are likely to be of interest in Ottawa, where Polymarket shows that new Liberal Party of Canada leader Mark Carney now has a significant lead over his Conservative rival Pierre Poilievre, even more than what poll aggregators are showing.

This post was originally published on this site