Information Markets Create A New Asset Class

Discussion in 'Crypto Assets' started by johnarb, Apr 29, 2021.

  1. johnarb

    johnarb

    Gambling or useful market?

    I think it's interesting and just sharing, I have no plans to invest or gamble on this, but may be of use when trying to attempt how to price a Fed rate increase or a futures market

    https://pomp.substack.com/p/information-markets-create-a-new

    Information Markets Create A New Asset Class
    Anthony Pompliano 6 hr ago 3 Pipe, which turn a company’s recurring revenue into a tradable asset. There will be many more creations of new asset classes via technology in the coming years. One of those that appears to be interesting is information markets. Below is a write-up from the team at Polymarket, the largest blockchain-based information markets platform. They explain what information markets are and why they’re long on this new financial asset.

    Why Bet on Tokens and Stocks When You Can Bet On Events?
    It’s April 2021 and you have 60% of your net worth in crypto. You’re long on BTC. You're long on ETH. But you also have some beliefs about the non-crypto world. And you want to make money off them. After months of lockdowns and masks, you think the pandemic is going to finally wind down over the summer. Travel is going to return, sports events and concerts are going to come back, and no more masks.

    What do you do? A traditional strategy is to think about the companies that might benefit from that return to life and put some money on them. Since you expect air travel to return to normal maybe you expect some of the big airlines like United Airlines (UAL) to bounce back and earn higher revenues. So you try to find some mirror asset (there are none), or (worse yet) cash out of your crypto and buy some United stock on a traditional exchange. But even if you do this, your investments are subject to the million other events that affect airline stock prices. Maybe you are totally right, and flights surge upwards, but because of larger than anticipated fuel costs, United misses earnings expectations and the stock price drops further.

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    How do you just place a simple bet that airline travel will increase? A new asset class coming out of the Decentralized Finance (DeFi) space finally lets you tie your money directly to these events rather than stocks, tokens, or other proxy agglomerations: information markets. This is a financial asset that’s tied to the outcome of a specific event. For example, here are just a few of the specific events you can trade on Polymarket:

    • Will airline travel increase?

    • Will NFT sales increase this month?

    • Will Donald Trump launch a social media platform?

    • Will the Biden administration meet its vaccination targets?
    At Polymarket, we’re long on information markets for 5 reasons.

    Prices Reflect Reality
    First, even if you’re not invested in them, they’re genuinely informative. Unlike the price of GME or Dogecoin, the price of a share in an information market directly translates to something concrete and useful--the market’s view on the expected probability of an event happening. Since “Yes” shares pay out $1.00 if the event happens (and “No” shares pay out $1.00 if the event doesn’t happen), the shares trade at the expected probability of an event happening. For example, “Yes” shares on the “Will the 2021 Tokyo Olympics take place?” market are currently trading at $0.83, implying an 83% chance of the Tokyo Olympics taking place.

    Because these markets force participants to put their money where their mouth is, they’re stunningly accurate. One study comparing an early political information market to 964 political polls found that the information markets outperformed the polls 74% of the time in predicting the winner of the Presidential election, both in the short- and long- term. Information markets have also been used internally by companies like Google and Ford to predict product launch dates, where they’ve improved these deadline forecasts by 25%. And recently, the British government launched their own information market, the Cosmic Bazaar, which has since been used to successfully identify terrorist activity in Mozambique.

    This accuracy comes not only from these markets’ ability to price-in relevant information, but also their tendency to price-out bad or irrelevant information. For example, amid the contentious unionization efforts at Amazon’s Alabama fulfillment center, on April 6 at 2:10 PM ET, an account tweeted, “BREAKING: AMAZON WORKERS IN BESSEMER, ALABAMA HAVE VOTED TO UNIONIZE WITH @RWDSU PER SOURCES,” receiving hundreds of likes and retweets. A seemingly breaking tip, amid media narratives that the union drive might “resurrect the labor movement.” How did the markets respond? Absolute silence. “No” share prices, which had solidly been centered around $0.85 for a week (indicating an 85% chance of the unionization drive failing) didn’t budge. The market, unlike the attention economy of Twitter, was able to disregard this low-value information. The market only moved from $0.85 to $0.99 when votes tallies started rolling in publicly on April 8th and 9th, definitively revealing that the workers had indeed voted by almost 2-to-1 not to unionize, and proving the initial market forecast correct.

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    Radically Transparent
    Second, financial transactions on information markets that are built on the blockchain are radically open. While traditional financial institutions like TD Ameritrade and even Robinhood made over $900 million dollars in 2019 by selling their order flows to wealthy and private institutional players, every single transaction on Polymarket is publicly accessible. To everyone. For free. This in turn has spurned more openness and innovation from the community.

    Take Jeff Rossiter, a former poker player with over $6 million in winnings turned full-stack developer. In his spare time, he built PolymarketWhales to track and display every trade on every market in Polymarket in real time. Here’s a snippet of the real-time transactions on April 19th, around 5 PM, on one of the COVID-19 vaccination markets. We can see a time stamped record of every buy and sell transaction on the market, many separated by mere seconds.

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    Credibility > Credentials
    Third, information markets reward the thing that matters most in forecasting: being right. Take coronavirus. While institutional players like Imperial College London or the Institute for Health Metrics, which had hundreds of millions in funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation, fumbled to accurately predict covid cases, scrappy and enterprising data scientists, like Youyang Gu, armed with little more than just some math and programming skills, built models that consistently outperformed these massively-funded institutional players. The forecasting community at Polymarket quickly learned to trust Youyang’s models (housed at https://covid19-projections.com) over these slow, stodgy, and inaccurate institutional players.

    [​IMG]
    Indeed, many of the most active and successful traders, who are often comparing notes and sharing code in the vibrant Polymarket Discord server, reflect Youyang’s ethos. Among them are: a former neuroscientist turned political trader, a former biologist turned network engineer turned covid forecaster, a ragtag group of former math majors, and news junkies who’ve made over $90K trading on their phones out of their parents’ homes.

    Pure Entertainment Value
    Fourth, information markets are just fun. It’s fun to follow the odds on events like whether Kanye West and Kim Kardashian will get divorced or how much Edward Snowden’s NFT will go for. Even for serious topics, there can be entertainment. After Egyptian authorities promised on March 25 that the Ever Given would be dislodged from the Suez Canal within 48 to 72 hours, allowing global shipping traffic to commence in one of the world’s most important waterways, we created a market that relied on the ship’s real-time GPS coordinates to let the market judge whether the authorities would be right. For the next few days, the community was consumed with translating breaking news in Arabic and following the GPS coordinates of the ship, generating half a million dollars in trading volume over a weekend.

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    Product-Market Fit
    Finally, we’re long on information markets because a platform has finally arrived to turn vision into reality. Since launching six months ago, Polymarket has become the largest blockchain-based information markets platform with over $100 million dollars in trade volume. We’ve raised funding from the biggest names in crypto like Naval Ravikant, Balaji Srinivasan, and Polychain Capital. We’ve been shouted out by Vitalik Buterin and covered by Coindesk, the Wall Street Journal, and more. We know the future is bright for Polymarket; we’d bet on it.
     
    Sprout likes this.
  2. This is not new. There are already quite a few betting markets established for informational events. It’s actually quite fun.
     
    johnarb likes this.
  3. johnarb likes this.
  4. orbit23

    orbit23

    upload_2021-4-30_23-1-41.png

    This might be a good bet. A 9x return.
    Paul is taller, heavier and 18 years younger.

    Or does he really stand no chance of winning?
     
    johnarb likes this.
  5. johnarb

    johnarb

    I think it's gonna be very very tough for Paul to win, but maybe worth a few $ in case he lands a lucky punch, except Mayweather is damn near impossible to catch