Original Author: Clow
Last month, a friend who trades perpetual contracts told me he's quitting futures.
Not because he was scared of losing—though he did lose a lot—but because he found a "cleaner" way to bet. Polymarket launched a 5-minute Bitcoin price movement prediction market. Spend $10 to buy a bunch of "Yes" shares, and if Bitcoin goes up even just one cent after 5 minutes, he gets back $100. If it goes down? He loses that $10, and that's it. Clean and simple.
No liquidation, no funding rates, no suffocating feeling of getting liquidated by a wick at 3 a.m. only to see the price bounce back.
He said: "This thing is like the crypto version of a scratch-off lottery ticket, but the odds are written right on its face."
Data shows he's not alone. On March 11, data disclosed by Polymarket showed that less than a month after its launch, the daily trading volume of the 5-minute price prediction market had already exceeded $60 million, accounting for 67% of the platform's total crypto directional prediction volume. 288 settlement windows every day, from morning till night, a new round every 5 minutes, non-stop.
Prediction markets used to be for betting on US elections and the Super Bowl. Now, it's become a 24/7 operating slot machine.
The Three Major Burdens of Perpetual Contracts
Why are retail traders fleeing perpetual contracts?
The answer is simple: Perpetual contracts are too unfriendly to retail. First, liquidation. You open a 10x long, a 10% price retracement wipes you out. Even if the price recovers an hour later, it has nothing to do with you anymore; your position has been eaten by the exchange. Second, funding rates. When long positions are crowded, you have to pay a "rent" to short sellers every 8 hours; the longer you hold, the more expensive it gets. Third, wicks. During the thinnest liquidity in the early morning hours, a mere few-hundred-dollar shadow can sweep away a bunch of stop-losses.
The 5-minute prediction market chops away all three of these problems.
You buy a "Yes" share for $0.10. The worst outcome is losing that $0.10. But if you win, you get back $1—a 10x return. It doesn't matter how Bitcoin fluctuates in between; it only looks at the price at the exact moment the 5-minute window closes. No liquidations, no funding rates, no "precision爆破" (targeted爆破) by market makers.
Simply put, this is speculation with completely transparent risk. You know exactly how much you can lose *before* you enter. This is impossible in perpetual contracts—unless you don't use leverage, but who plays perpetuals without leverage?
For those who were once keen on meme coins and 100x contracts, the 5-minute prediction market is practically tailor-made: high-frequency, exciting, low barrier to entry, instant results. This isn't replacing perpetual contracts; it's stealing perpetual contract users.
How Did Polymarket Do It?
Technically, Polymarket uses the "Conditional Tokens Framework" (CTF). Each 5-minute window is an independent binary event: Did Bitcoin go up or not? Settlements run on the Polygon chain, which is low-cost and fast; price feeds use Chainlink Data Streams, ensuring the settlement price isn't just decided by the platform itself.
But the truly clever design is in the fees.
What's the biggest fear with such a short 5-minute cycle? Latency arbitrage. Someone with a faster data source places a bet fractions of a second before the Chainlink feed updates, almost guaranteeing a profit. Polymarket's response is clever: dynamic fees. The closer the market probability is to 50% (i.e., the point of greatest uncertainty), the higher the taker fee, reaching up to 1.56%. When the outcome is more certain (probability near 0% or 100%), the fee drops to almost zero.
This means if you want to arbitrage in the most "profitable" grey zone, you first have to pay a not-so-cheap toll. The room for making money based solely on network speed is significantly compressed, forcing you to bet based on actual judgment.
The collected fees aren't wasted—20% is directly rebated to market makers, incentivizing them to provide deeper liquidity on the order book. Within a month of launch, the depth of the 5-minute market was already able to handle large trades.
AI Bots Have Already Arrived
Of the $60 million in daily volume, how much is contributed by retail? Probably less than one might think.
Developers on Reddit are already sharing trading bots targeting the 5-minute market, claiming win rates above 80%. These bots use "regime identification" techniques to automatically judge whether the current market is bullish, bearish, or ranging, then switch between different prediction strategies. With 288 settlement windows every day, backtesting data is extremely rich; AI can run through sample sizes in days that would take years to accumulate in traditional markets.
More notably is a partnership Polymarket just announced: On March 10, the platform partnered with Palantir and TWG AI to use their jointly developed Vergence AI engine to monitor trading activity, screen for违规 (violating) accounts, and detect insider trading.
There's a subtle contradiction here. The platform welcomes AI traders on one hand—they bring liquidity and make markets more efficient; on the other hand, it must guard against AI cheating—using faster data sources for front-running, cross-platform arbitrage, or even price manipulation. Polymarket's solution: use AI to monitor AI.
As for who will win this "AI vs. AI" arms race, nobody knows yet. But one thing is certain: the proportion of human trading in the 5-minute market's volume will only get smaller.
Exchanges Can't Sit Still
Faced with the encroachment of prediction markets, traditional exchanges have reacted with surprising unity: if you can't beat them, join them (or acquire/incorporate them).
Binance, in early March, launched Opinion (OPN), a prediction market infrastructure protocol, via Launchpool, trying to stake a claim on this new territory from the protocol layer. Coinbase, at the end of January, directly integrated Kalshi's contracts, allowing US users to trade prediction markets within the Coinbase app. Gemini is more aggressive, having spent five years obtaining a CFTC DCM license to build its own Gemini Predictions, covering all 50 US states.
Three routes, three strategies, but the same goal: retain the users flowing towards prediction markets.
The story of Kalshi best illustrates the trend. In 2024, Kalshi's annual trading volume was about $300 million—an unremarkable figure. Then it embedded NFL event contracts into Robinhood, allowing tens of millions of retail users to buy prediction contracts like stocks. In 2025, Kalshi's annual trading volume soared to $23.8 billion, annualized at one point touching $50 billion.
From $300 million to $23.8 billion, not because Kalshi itself became stronger, but because it found distribution channels. Prediction markets are no longer a niche tool users must actively seek out—they are being stuffed into brokerage apps, payment software, and even media platforms, becoming a basic financial function.
This dimensional打击 (dimensional打击 - likely means overwhelming advantage) in distribution power is what exchanges truly fear.
The Sword of Regulation Hangs Overhead
The faster prediction markets grow, the more regulatory contradictions are exposed.
In the US, the CFTC认定 (determines) prediction contracts are "swaps," federally regulated financial derivatives, and specifically submitted a court brief in February 2026 to assert exclusive jurisdiction. But state gambling commissions aren't buying it—the chairman of the Nevada Gaming Control Board's original words were: "In our view, this is sports betting, plain and simple." Nearly 20 states have filed lawsuits or cease-and-desist orders against Kalshi; 37 states formed a coalition opposing the federal "land grab."
The result is an absurd situation: legal at the federal level, illegal at the state level. Polymarket acquired a CFTC-licensed entity by the end of 2025 and relaunched a US version via a waitlist, but as of today, its expansion speed is still hampered by this tug-of-war between the federal government and the states.
In Asia, the situation is more direct. Singapore's Gambling Regulatory Authority outright banned Polymarket in January 2025; whether you're betting on Bitcoin or the Super Bowl, it's all considered illegal gambling. Hong Kong's SFC is slightly more polite, allowing professional investors to trade virtual asset derivatives, but the door is shut tight for retail.
The EU is stuck in a classification quagmire: if a prediction contract is pegged to a financial index, it's a financial instrument under MiFID II; if it's pegged to a non-financial event, multiple member states directly treat it under gambling bans. France, Belgium, and Romania have already率先封堵 (taken the lead in blocking).
The global regulatory attitude towards prediction markets can be summarized in one sentence: Everyone wants to regulate it, but nobody knows how to regulate it.
Summary
Polymarket's 5-minute market proves one thing: what retail wants is never "holding assets," but "gaming the outcome."
When a platform can use simpler rules, lower barriers, and faster feedback cycles to perfect the act of speculation, the high-leverage products of traditional exchanges are no longer the only choice. Exchanges are already scrambling to incorporate prediction markets, regulators are still arguing whether it's gambling or finance—but users don't care about these definitions.
Every 5 minutes, 288 times, day after day.
The vote cast by retail users with their feet is more honest than any regulatory definition.






