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Analysis: Coinbase's Armstrong Made Prediction Markets Look 'Fun.' Bill Ackman Made Them Look Real

A Coinbase CEO prank resolved one market with a single sentence. Ackman’s warning about “rigged odds” in a $22 million Polymarket election shows the opposite: it now takes institutional-scale money to move prices even 10%.

Updated Oct 31, 2025, 3:31 p.m. Published Oct 31, 2025, 5:44 a.m.
Crystal Ball, Prediction

What to know:

  • Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong's unexpected comment turned a small prediction market into a joke, affecting bets on Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Web3.
  • The New York City mayoral market shows the seriousness of prediction markets with $22 million in open interest and significant financial implications.
  • Zohran Mamdani leads in both prediction markets and polls, reflecting strong voter sentiment and making manipulation unlikely.

Brian Armstrong’s last-minute crypto shout-out turned a $4,000 prediction market into a punchline. With a few words, the Coinbase CEO made every bet on “Bitcoin,” “Ethereum,” and “Web3” pay out at once.

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It was a thin market, where the largest winner took home only $111, according to Poymarket Analytics.

But if Armstrong’s impromptu word salad showed how ridiculous prediction markets can get, New York City mayoral market, with $22 million in open interest, shows how serious they’ve become. Moving the odds there by just 10 percentage points would now cost roughly $1 million in concentrated buying power.

That’s because Polymarket’s open interest reflects real money sitting in a liquidity pool, not just the sum of theoretical wagers waiting to settle. Every trade interacts with an automated pricing curve backed by collateral, meaning odds shift gradually rather than being set by direct matches between traders.

The biggest positions show just how deep that pool runs: whales like "dubdubdub2" and "asfgh" each hold over $2 million backing Zohran Mamdani, according to Polymarket Analytics, while most of the large “No” traders are already sitting on heavy losses and have little room to add capital.

Because of this, any new bet placed “out of the money”, for example, buying Andrew Cuomo at long odds or selling Mamdani near 95%, is quickly absorbed by the market maker’s curve, which adjusts prices based on supply and demand.

To move the odds by 10 percentage points, a trader needs to push through millions of dollars in opposing orders, around $1 million in concentrated buying or selling, before the curve starts to meaningfully shift. The market’s size and structure make small attempts at manipulation almost instantly diluted by existing capital.

Recent polling backs up the market’s view. A Fox News survey shows Mamdani leading Cuomo by 16 points, while an Emerson College poll puts his advantage at 25, evidence that his 95% odds reflect voter sentiment rather than manipulation.

Perhaps there was also a misunderstanding that polls measure what voters say they’ll do, while prediction markets measure how confident traders are that those voters will actually do it, so a candidate polling at 50% doesn’t necessarily have a 50% chance of winning.

Ackman’s criticism missed what traders already knew: if Mamdani’s 95% odds were truly inflated, anyone could have exploited the mispricing.

As CSPTrading.eth put it, right now a bet on Mamdani is just a guaranteed 5% return in 10 days.


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Bitcoin could fall to $10,000 as U.S. recession risk builds, Mike McGlone says

Bitcoin bus (Photo: Olivier Acuna/Modified by CoinDesk)

McGlone links bitcoin’s downturn to record U.S. market cap-to-GDP levels, low equity volatility and rising gold prices, warning of potential contagion into stocks.

What to know:

  • Bloomberg Intelligence strategist Mike McGlone warns that collapsing crypto prices and a potential bitcoin slide toward $10,000 could signal mounting financial stress and foreshadow a U.S. recession.
  • McGlone argues the post-2008 "buy the dip" era may be ending as crypto weakens, stock market valuations sit near century highs relative to GDP, and equity volatility remains unusually low.
  • Market analyst Jason Fernandes counters that a drop to $10,000 bitcoin would likely require a severe systemic shock and recession, calling such an outcome a low-probability tail risk compared with a milder reset or consolidation.