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Stanford researchers link Polymarket design to Bitcoin price rigging

Sophisticated traders have siphoned an estimated $1.28 million from retail participants by exploiting the five-minute settlement windows on Polymarket’s Bitcoin prediction contracts. A joint study by Stanford University and Singapore Management University suggests that the platform's reliance on instantaneous spot-price feeds creates a direct incentive for market manipulation.

Stanford researchers link Polymarket design to Bitcoin price rigging

The research highlights that the issue lies in the contract architecture rather than the concept of prediction markets themselves. By analyzing trading patterns following the July 2024 launch of these short-duration contracts, authors identified a recurring spike in spot-market order flow immediately preceding settlement, followed by rapid price reversals. This activity indicates that large-scale traders are intentionally moving the price to trigger favorable contract outcomes.

To mitigate these risks, the paper suggests moving away from instantaneous price snapshots. Extending contract durations to 15 minutes or adopting time-weighted average prices would significantly reduce the window for manipulation. These findings carry weight beyond decentralized platforms, as traditional exchanges like Nasdaq and Cboe explore similar event-based financial products. As the industry faces mounting scrutiny from U.S. regulators and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the debate over how to properly structure these markets remains a pivotal challenge for the future of financial oversight.

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