In a dramatic convergence of geopolitics, financial markets, and online wagering, a new group of players — some ordinary traders, others alleged insiders — have made millions of dollars betting on the outcome and timing of the recent military strikes on Iran. These bets have not taken place on traditional betting sites or stock exchanges, but rather on prediction market platforms where users speculate on real-world events.
This article explores who these bettors are, how they made their money, the controversy surrounding their profits, and what it reveals about the evolving world of prediction markets.
🧠 What Are Prediction Markets?
To understand who is profiting, it’s essential to first explain the platforms where these bets are happening:
Prediction markets are online exchange-like systems where users can buy and sell “contracts” tied to specific future events — from presidential elections to sporting events, and now, geopolitical conflicts like Iran.
If a contract resolves in your favor, each contract pays out at a fixed value (usually $1). If it doesn’t, it becomes worthless.
Examples of popular platforms include Polymarket and Kalshi. These markets are not traditional bookmakers or casinos — they operate more like financial markets, with prices reflecting the crowd’s estimated probability of an event occurring.
💰 How Much Money Was Bet on Iran Strikes?
The scale of betting has been enormous:
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Over $529 million in total wagers were placed on Iran-related contracts across major prediction markets.
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On one Polymarket contract alone — “US strikes Iran by Feb.
28” — tens of millions of dollars were matched between buyers and sellers before the strike occurred.
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Social analytics firm Bubblemaps has reported that six wallets made roughly $1.2 million in profit by correctly betting on the precise timing of the strike — all funded in the hours before the event.
The numbers involved have alarmed regulators, lawmakers, breaking news and the public alike — sparking debates over legality, ethics, and regulation.
🚀 Who Exactly Profited?
1.
Anonymous Crypto Wallets
The most headline-grabbing winners have been anonymous crypto wallets — accounts with no publicly known identity — that deposited funds shortly before the strike and placed large bets:
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These accounts were newly created in many cases, with minimal trading history prior to the Iran market.
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Most placed bets within hours of the military strike, leading to speculation that they had access to non-public information.
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One wallet identified by analytics firms placed around $26,000 on one outcome and made over $174,000 when it resolved correctly.
These traders are essentially anonymous profiles on blockchain-based prediction markets, making them virtually untraceable unless they voluntarily reveal their identities.
2.
Individual Accounts With Large Profits
Public scrutiny has revealed several named or semi-anonymized accounts with significant profits:
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An account known as “Magamyman” reportedly made roughly half a million dollars betting on the exact date of the U.S. strike.
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Another user, “Dicedicedice“, earned nearly $150,000 from similar wagers.