Why a $150M Polymarket bet could pay the side that appeared to lose


Why a 0M Polymarket bet could pay the side that appeared to lose


A nearly $150 million prediction market has devolved into chaos after the platform Polymarket moved to deny payouts to traders who accurately predicted that corporate treasury firm Strategy would sell a portion of its Bitcoin holdings.

The dispute centers on a fundamental disconnect between when an event occurs and when it is publicly disclosed, exposing structural flaws in how decentralized prediction markets resolve multibillion-dollar wagers. Bettors are now locked in a bitter dispute over a technicality that could wipe out millions of dollars in payouts traders believed were guaranteed.

On June 1, Strategy, the business intelligence firm formerly known as MicroStrategy, which holds nearly $60 billion of the top crypto asset, filed a regulatory document confirming it sold 32 Bitcoin, valued at roughly $2.5 million, between May 26 and May 31.

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For participants in a Polymarket contract asking whether Strategy would sell any of its Bitcoin by May 31, the 8-K filing appeared to be definitive proof of a “Yes” outcome.

However, the market is currently navigating a contested resolution process that heavily favors “No.”

Polymarket administrators issued a post-deadline clarification stating that, because the public confirmation of the sale did not emerge until June 1, the transaction does not qualify under the platform’s operational customs.

The situation has sparked widespread allegations of market manipulation, drawing intense scrutiny to the mechanics of decentralized betting at a time when prediction platforms are striving for mainstream financial legitimacy.

The timeline of the contested Polymarket trade

The ongoing controversy stems from the contract’s specific wording, which stated that the market would resolve to “Yes” if Strategy sold any of its Bitcoin by 11:59 p.m. ET on May 31.

The rules explicitly designated the company’s public disclosures and on-chain data as the primary sources of resolution.

Strategy's Contested Bitcoin Sales Event Contract on Polymarket Strategy's Contested Bitcoin Sales Event Contract on Polymarket
Strategy’s Contested Bitcoin Sales Event Contract on Polymarket (Source: Polymarket)

When Strategy filed its mandatory 8-K disclosure on June 1, the market remained open for active trading. Observing that the firm had executed a sale objectively before the May 31 deadline, several traders rushed to capitalize on what they perceived as a pricing inefficiency.

One market participant, operating under the pseudonym willo2, staked $527,000 on “Yes” after reading the regulatory filing. Because the market was pricing the odds of a sale at around 80 cents on the dollar even after the disclosure, the trader anticipated a 20% arbitrage opportunity.

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Instead, the trader lost the entire half-million-dollar principal. Following the influx of capital, Polymarket added a clarification to the market description, stating that confirmations outside the specified timeframe would not be honored.

Speaking on these events, Willo wrote on X:

“This was straight-up NOT part of the rules. It was not written down on the market, it did not make sense – and most of all, Polymarket didn’t even believe it themselves. Why? Because if it was true, the market would have closed on May 31st. The market didn’t close.”

Market analysts have widely condemned the sequence of events. Jeff Dorman, chief investment officer at the digital asset management firm Arca, pointed out a critical logical inconsistency in the platform’s handling of the timeline.

Dorman noted that if the contract’s strict parameters dictated an end precisely at midnight on May 31, the platform should have halted all trading at that exact moment.

According to him, allowing participants to continue buying shares on June 1 while retroactively enforcing a May 31 confirmation deadline created a trap for traders relying on traditional legal interpretations of the contract text.

Jonatan Pallesen, a data scientist who monitors decentralized platforms, characterized the platform’s behavior as a form of fraud by omission.

Pallesen argued that while requiring news confirmation to align with the event deadline is a reasonable safeguard against indefinite market delays, failing to explicitly codify that custom in the contract rules exploits retail bettors.

Institutional traders familiar with the platform’s unspoken conventions were able to extract significant capital from users who reasonably assumed that a completed sale meant a winning ticket.

The UMA oracle vulnerability

The Strategy dispute has escalated from a single contract into a referendum on Polymarket’s underlying settlement architecture.

Unlike traditional financial exchanges that rely on centralized clearinghouses and legal compliance departments to settle derivatives, Polymarket outsources its truth-finding to Universal Market Access (UMA).

UMA operates as an “optimistic oracle,” a decentralized network where token holders vote to resolve disputed outcomes.

Under this framework, any user can challenge a proposed market settlement by staking a $750 bond. If the outcome is contested multiple times, the decision defaults to a vote by UMA cryptocurrency holders.

The ultimate payout is determined by the weight of tokens cast, rather than an objective judicial review of the facts.

Critics argue that this system is highly vulnerable to manipulation. Eric Conner, a prominent cryptocurrency analyst, noted that the token-voting model is structurally compromised.

Conner argued that large token holders, often referred to as whales, can weaponize ambiguous contract rules to protect their own financial positions and override objective reality to prevent massive losses.

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