A Polymarket user placed a $37,000 wager on China invading Taiwan in 2026, raising questions about geopolitical speculation on prediction markets. The bet follows a $32,000 wager that netted $436,000 after President Donald Trump announced a military operation in Venezuela that resulted in the removal of President Nicolás Maduro.
What Happened: Geopolitical Bets
A Polymarket user placed $32,000 on Maduro's removal shortly before Trump held a briefing on Jan. 2 announcing the extraction operation involving Delta Force soldiers.
The user collected $436,000 on the wager, prompting speculation that administration officials may have leaked information to associates.
Another user has now bet $37,000 on a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, a self-governed island that Beijing claims as its territory. The White House declined to inform Congress about the Venezuela operation, citing security leak concerns.
Also Read: Ethereum Climbs Past $3.2K As Blue Origin Integrates Crypto Payments Through NYSE-Listed Shift4
Why It Matters: Market Integrity
Secretary of Defense Pete Hesgeth, who attended the Venezuela announcement, has faced scrutiny for handling classified information on personal devices used for gambling activities.
The Institute of the Study of War reported a similar incident last year when an analyst made unauthorized map edits that affected prediction market payouts related to the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
Congressional representatives have begun questioning whether government officials should face restrictions on prediction market trading involving classified information.
Read Next: Does Venezuela Hold 600K Bitcoin Worth $56B? Evidence Remains Elusive

