
Six anonymous crypto accounts profited hours before U.S.-Israel strikes, raising questions about fairness and possible insider knowledge.
Six newly created anonymous crypto wallets made roughly $1.2 million by correctly betting that the United States would strike Iran, placing those bets just hours before the attack and sparking sharp criticism and questions about the fairness of prediction markets.
Polymarket Bets Raise Red Flags
According to blockchain analytics firm Bubblemaps, accounts funded only hours or days before the February 28th US-Israel strikes on Iran all bet “yes” on that outcome and profited when the event unfolded. Behavior, the analysts say, looks highly unusual and possibly indicates access to non‑public information.
As accounts timed their positions very precisely relative to real-world military actions, analysts say it looks suspicious, highly unusual and possibly indicates access to non‑public information.
Record Trading, Geopolitical Focus
The activity occurred amid massive trading volumes on Polymarket, with the platform reporting historic single‑day figures as conflict‑related contracts dominated user interest.
On the day of the strikes, Polymarket’s notional daily trading volume hit a record near $480 million, driven largely by markets tied to the Iran conflict and related outcomes.
Geopolitical contracts alone generated a record $425 million in the week ending March 1, pushing the site’s cumulative volume to an all-time high of $2.4 billion.
Insider Trading or Luck? Integrity Concerns Mount
Blockchain analytics from Bubblemaps has flagged the bets as highly suspicious due to their precision and the accounts’ short existence.
While none of the accounts have been publicly identified by regulators, the pattern has drawn scrutiny from lawmakers and analysts alike.
Democratic lawmakers have expressed outrage, with some calling the situation “insane” and urging stronger oversight of prediction markets that allow anonymity and offer bets tied to real‑world violence.
“It’s insane this is legal,” Senator Chris Murphy wrote in a post on Bluesky. “People around Trump are profiting off war and death. I’m introducing legislation ASAP to ban this.”
Ahead of the Iran conflict, U.S. lawmakers raised alarms over prediction markets, warning they could threaten national security or even spark violence.
Six senators urged the CFTC to explicitly bar contracts tied to an individual’s death, setting a March 9 deadline for a response.
The industry group Coalition for Prediction Markets backed the call, saying death-based contracts shouldn’t exist on US exchanges. The CFTC, which already bans bets on terrorism, assassinations, and war, has yet to comment.
Platform Stance and Anonymity Issues
Polymarket has not publicly commented on the specific trades. The platform continues to list active contracts on potential ceasefires, nuclear talks, and further escalation in the region.
Unlike US-regulated prediction markets like Kalshi, which make users verify their identities, Polymarket lets anyone trade with just a crypto wallet, offering more anonymity and raising the risk that insiders could profit undetected.
Why This Matters
This episode highlights how prediction markets, especially unregulated ones, can blur the line between speculative forecasting and potential misuse of sensitive information, raising broader questions about fairness and market integrity.
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