Prediction market user made $436,000 betting on Maduro capture

Prediction market user made $436,000 betting on Maduro capture

Prediction market user made $436,000 betting on Maduro capture

A trader made more than $436,000 on a prediction market by appearing to anticipate former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s capture by U.S. forces last weekend, raising questions about the timing of the bet and the integrity of such online futures trading platforms.

An anonymous user on Polymarket won the payout after placing a roughly $32,000 wager on Maduro’s removal — just before President Trump announced the U.S. had ousted the former leader.

The longshot wager raises questions about the anonymous bettor’s identity and potential access to inside information ahead of the U.S. operation to seize Maduro and his wife, legal and financial experts told CBS News.

Polymarket, a New York-based cryptocurrency prediction market that recently secured a $2 billion investment from stock exchange operator Intercontinental Exchange, is currently pursuing regulatory approval in the U.S.

Suspicious timing?

A Polymarket account holder, who appeared to join the trading platform in December, bet $32,537 on the likelihood that Maduro would be “out by January 31, 2026.” The speculative investment was placed shortly before Mr. Trump announced Maduro’s arrest at 4:21 a.m. Saturday on Truth Social.

An anonymous bettor made over $400,000 on a $32,000 wager that former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro would be ousted by the end of January. / Credit: Polymarket
An anonymous bettor made over $400,000 on a $32,000 wager that former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro would be ousted by the end of January. / Credit: Polymarket

Experts said several indicators suggest the bettor could have had access to classified information regarding the U.S. operation to capture Maduro.

“It clearly suggests that the bettor did have access to inside information,” said Dennis Kelleher, cofounder and CEO of Better Markets, a nonpartisan advocacy group focused on financial reform. “This particular bet has all the hallmarks of a trade based on inside information. It happened very late, right before the very event they were betting on happened; it was a relatively large amount of money; and it happened in a market that is not really regulated and where there is no transparency.”

Three additional bets were made via the same Polymarket account: a $1,000 wager on the U.S. invading Venezuela by January 31; a $250 wager that Mr. Trump would invoke the War Powers Act against Venezuela by January 31; and a $146 wager that U.S. forces would land in Venezuela by the end of the month.

“It was a new account only betting on issues around the Venezuelan president’s potential removal from office — there are a lot of telltale signs that make it seem like insider trading,” Stephen Piepgrass, a regulatory attorney at Troutman Pepper Locke who specializes in futures trading, told CBS News.

Polymarket did not respond to a request for comment on the Maduro-related bets. Last fall, company CEO Shayne Coplan told CBS News that insiders “having an edge to the market is a good thing.”