Polymarket's Sixth Anniversary: Bathroom, Exile, and Homecoming

marsbitОпубликовано 2026-06-18Обновлено 2026-06-18

Введение

Polymarket, a prediction market platform, recently celebrated its sixth anniversary. Born during New York's COVID-19 lockdown, founder Shayne Coplan built the initial product from his bathroom. The platform allows users to trade on the outcomes of real-world events, aiming to aggregate information faster than traditional media or polls. Its early years involved navigating regulatory challenges, most notably a 2022 CFTC order and penalty for offering unregistered event contracts, which led to a ban on U.S. users. Despite this "exile," the platform persisted, gaining significant traction during major news events like the 2024 U.S. presidential election, where its markets often preceded mainstream narratives. A pivotal shift occurred in 2025. Following the conclusion of a DOJ/CFTC investigation, Polymarket strategically acquired a CFTC-regulated exchange (QCX) to re-enter the U.S. market legally. It secured a massive strategic investment from Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), NYSE's parent company, and formed high-profile partnerships with sports leagues like the NHL, UFC, and MLB, as well as media outlets including Google and the Wall Street Journal. Now valued in the tens of billions, Polymarket stands at the intersection of crypto, finance, media, and sports. Its journey reflects a constant tension between innovative information aggregation and regulatory scrutiny, evolving from a fringe crypto experiment into a mainstream, albeit still contested, financial and data infrast...

June 17th marked Polymarket's sixth anniversary since launch.

In the crypto world, six years is a very long time. Long enough for a narrative to go from bubble to ruin, and for a product to evolve from a fringe experiment into mainstream infrastructure. Six years ago, Polymarket was just a prediction market built by a young founder in his bathroom during New York's pandemic lockdown. Six years later, it has entered the frameworks of Google, the WSJ, sports leagues, CFTC regulation, and the balance sheet of ICE, the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, becoming the world's most-watched "information market."

If we look only at today, Polymarket appears to be a typical success story: surging trading volume, soaring valuation, its founder joining the ranks of the youngest self-made billionaires, and prediction markets moving from crypto circles into mainstream media and sports broadcasts. But rewinding the timeline reveals a story far from smooth. It's not a history of linear growth but an adventure of being repeatedly kicked out and constantly trying to return through the front door.

Polymarket's original proposition was simple: in a world full of uncertainty, can price discover truth faster than media, experts, and polls? COVID, US elections, the Titan submersible, Biden's withdrawal, the Trump Whale, the FBI raid, CFTC approval, ICE investment—over these six years, it repeatedly turned real-world events into markets and was repeatedly counterattacked by the rules of the real world.

Therefore, the significance of Polymarket's sixth anniversary lies in witnessing how a crypto product born in a bathroom has arrived at the intersection of finance, media, sports, and regulation. This article by BlockBeats aims to tell the story of these six years for Polymarket: how it survived, how it was driven out of the US, and how it bought its ticket home.

The Gambler in the Bathroom

In October 2013, an email landed in the inbox of the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

The sender was Shayne Coplan, 14 years old, a sophomore in high school in Manhattan. According to his later account, this email came from a teenager fascinated by electronic communication networks after reading "Flash Boys." The body was short, but the tone carried a mixture typical of youth: half innocence, half confidence.

He introduced himself as a high school sophomore in Manhattan working on an ECN-based stock exchange. His first step was to confirm this idea was "completely legal" and could meet SEC regulatory requirements.

Shayne Coplan

On December 2, 2024, Coplan posted this old email on X, captioning it simply: "What people call an 'overnight success' takes a decade." Looking back over a decade later, this email seems like an almost too-perfect foreshadowing. Coplan, of course, didn't know then that what he would eventually build wouldn't be a traditional stock exchange but a prediction market where the world could bet on the future with price. He also wouldn't know that this market would later be driven out of the US over regulatory issues, only to try and walk back through the front door years later.

The Prehistory of Polymarket

Coplan grew up in Manhattan, raised by his mother; his father was an NYU film professor. He attended a public school in Hell's Kitchen, not an elite prep school for Wall Street progeny. His later persona also didn't resemble someone trained in the traditional financial system. He seemed more like a kid shaped by internet culture, cryptocurrency, startup biographies, and the streets of New York.

Coplan credited his high school graduation to "cramming, caffeine, and Wikipedia." Photo: Shayne Coplan/Facebook

During those years, he began exploring cryptocurrency. According to media reports, the entry point even had a touch of early-internet serendipity: while downloading pirated music, he stumbled upon crypto, started researching, and even tried building his own mining rig. For many of his peers, the internet was for games, music, and social platforms; for Coplan, it was more like a staircase leading directly to the basement. Down those stairs, he saw a new financial world without teachers, admission tickets, or age barriers.

In 2014, the Ethereum presale began. Coplan bought ETH at around $0.30 per coin. This early investment later became the seed capital for his ventures.

Around the same time, he approached the lyrics website Genius. He sent many emails with no response, so he just showed up at their office door. NYMag later described the young Coplan with messy curly hair and an almost encyclopedic knowledge of billionaire tech entrepreneurs. Genius eventually gave him an internship.

This experience is important to the Polymarket story because it shows Coplan's early study wasn't finance but "how people turn an internet idea into reality." He annotated pages for figures like Zuckerberg and Travis Kalanick on Genius, as if sketching a blueprint for his own future path. A teenager repeatedly reading and dissecting these stories was essentially learning a path: how a fringe idea enters the mainstream world.

He later enrolled at NYU for computer science but dropped out after one semester to pursue crypto entrepreneurship full-time. In 2018-2019, he acquired the domain union.market and built a product called Union Market, focused on yield-generating digital assets. This project didn't truly take off.

But failure didn't pull him away from the "market" problem. During that period, he read economist Robin Hanson's papers on futarchy. The core idea of futarchy is radical: if markets can aggregate information, can prediction markets help society make decisions? In other words, can prices reflect not just asset value but also the probability of future events?

Coplan wrote to Hanson, saying he wanted to build a prediction market. Hanson didn't take it too seriously. The reason was straightforward: prediction markets weren't a new concept; there had been many attempts over decades, with more failures than successes. This field always sounded right in theory but was notoriously difficult to integrate into mainstream life.

By the end of 2019, Coplan became completely disillusioned with crypto. He was 21, having dropped out two and a half years prior, hadn't achieved significant success, and was running low on funds. In retrospect, the birth of Polymarket is often framed as a "genius founder discovers an opportunity" story. But in the real timeline, it was more like someone at a low point continuing to search for an exit within an old idea.

What changed everything was 2020.

COVID Breaks the Mold

In March 2020, New York became the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic in the US.

Times Square emptied, Broadway closed, restaurants stacked chairs on tables, subway cars held only a few scattered masked individuals. Ambulance sirens became the city's background score. Every morning, people's first act wasn't checking the weather but looking at new cases, hospitalizations, deaths, the governor's press conferences, and new lockdown rules.

For most New Yorkers, lockdown meant fear, stagnation, and endless waiting. Some lost jobs, some left the city, others were trapped in small apartments, refreshing news feeds repeatedly.

Everyone was asking the same kinds of questions: When will lockdown end? Will cases keep rising? When will a vaccine arrive? Will the pandemic alter the presidential election? But traditional information channels provided unstable answers. Experts, media, government, social platforms—each voice seemed certain, yet each certainty was soon overturned by new realities.

This was precisely the environment prediction markets needed most. Not because people suddenly loved gambling, but because life was filled with unavoidable, unpredictable real-world problems. The pandemic turned "the future" from an abstract concept into something everyone had to confront daily. Everyone was predicting, but most predictions lacked a price.

Coplan saw this opportunity.

He developed the product in the bathroom of his Lower East Side apartment in New York. He later repeatedly referred to it as his "makeshift bathroom office."

A young man with almost no resources, in the world's most chaotic moment, trying to build a market to price that chaos. The pandemic turned everyone into predictors, and Coplan aimed to compress the judgments scattered across chat groups, news comment sections, expert interviews, and trader desks into a tradable price.

He had no co-founder, his money was running out, needing to inventory his apartment items to figure out what to sell for rent. The product name also evolved: Union.market, Union Marketplace, finally becoming Polymarket. This name later seemed inevitable, but initially, it was just a new entrance growing from the wreckage of an old project.

Polymarket founder Shayne Coplan, Source: CBS "60 Minutes"

In June 2020, Polymarket officially launched. Technically, it used Polygon and settled with USDC, offering lower fees, faster speeds, and a user experience closer to a regular internet product compared to earlier Ethereum mainnet prediction markets like Augur.

The early markets were direct: ETH price, US COVID-19 case trends, the 2020 election. These seemingly disparate markets actually pointed to the same question: when the world is surrounded by uncertainty, are people willing to use real money to express their judgments about the future?

Four months later, answers began to emerge.

By October 2020, the US presidential election was in its final stretch. The pandemic persisted, mail-in ballots became a new battleground, echoes of racial protests lingered on streets and in debates, and the shadow of economic recession weighed on household bills and market expectations. Trump tried to prove he could lead America out of the crisis, while Biden framed the election as a chance to "restore normalcy."

That fall, every part of American society was being pulled apart by politics. TV networks scrolled polls daily, anchors rehashed scenarios over red-blue maps; social media overflowed with conspiracy theories, mobilization, and arguments over mail-in voting; Wall Street tried to gauge the direction of taxes, regulation, and fiscal policy; ordinary people searched for certainty between the pandemic and the election. Everyone asked: Does Trump still have a chance? How solid is Biden's lead? If vote counting drags on, will markets crash first?

Polymarket launched as a niche crypto tool, but the election gave it its first real public test. In October, Polymarket closed a $4 million seed round led by Polychain Capital, with participation from Naval Ravikant, Nick Tomaino of 1confirmation, and others.

For a product freshly built in a bathroom, this money wasn't just funding; it was a signal: at least a group of crypto investors believed prediction markets could become useful again.

In November, the Biden-Trump showdown reached its climax. Polymarket's prices pointed to a Biden victory for weeks leading up to the vote. The "Will Trump win?" market saw over $8 million in trading volume. Looking back today, $8 million isn't huge, nowhere near the tens of billions during the 2024 election cycle. But at the time, it proved one thing: people were willing to trade their political judgments on a chain-based market.

This $8 million wasn't the endpoint of a commercial success but the beginning of a product proposition. It proved Polymarket wasn't just a temporary pandemic toy or a crypto circle's self-amusing experiment. It gave the question—"Can market prices serve as real-time signals for public events?"—its first visible sample.

Of course, Polymarket in 2020 was still tiny. It was more of a crypto niche tool than a reference source for mainstream political media. Coplan still ran social accounts himself, DMing investors one by one, hoping for retweets and likes. Vitalik Buterin tried Polymarket around the same time and tweeted praise for its UX being friendly to non-crypto users. This praise was important because one of the biggest past failures of prediction markets was beautiful theory paired with unusable products.

The Regulatory Knock

In 2021, Polymarket evolved from a personal project into a company of over ten people. Users grew from thousands to tens of thousands MAU. A more complete team formed around it: product, markets, community, dispute resolution. It was no longer just a page Coplan built in his bathroom but a real trading venue producing prices, controversies, and news material.

The internal culture was very "rebel/maverick," carrying the typical crypto startup ethos: build first, let the market run, then deal with rules and boundaries.

It was the 2021 crypto bull market; almost everyone believed speed trumped order. DeFi, NFTs, DAOs, play-to-earn—new narratives emerged daily, each challenging old rules. Polymarket operated within this atmosphere.

Coplan also continued building social capital within crypto culture. Under the pseudonym ethsquiat, he collected NFTs extensively, early on supporting crypto artists like FEWOCiOUS. This wasn't Polymarket's product line, but it helps understand Coplan. For this generation of founders, identity, capital, taste, and product are often intertwined; a wallet address can sometimes say more about you than a business card.

But Polymarket differed from most crypto products. NFTs could be framed as art, DeFi as financial experiments, DAOs as organizational innovation. Once a prediction market started handling real-world events, it directly hit the boundaries of financial regulation. Polymarket could call itself an information market, but regulators saw something else: users betting money on event outcomes looked like unregistered event contract trading.

Thus, CFTC's scrutiny became concrete. The question was no longer "Is your product interesting?" but "Are you authorized to offer these contracts?" The more markets Polymarket hosted, the sharper the question. ETH price, COVID cases, presidential elections, policy events—these were information to users but could be binary options in regulatory documents.

On January 3, 2022, the CFTC issued a cease-and-desist order against Polymarket, alleging it operated unregistered event-based binary options markets, i.e., off-exchange binary options contracts not offered on a designated contract market. Penalties included a $1.4 million civil fine, requiring the winding down of non-compliant markets and cessation of violations. The CFTC also noted Polymarket received a penalty reduction due to substantial cooperation. By that time, Polymarket had offered over 900 event markets.

Following the penalty, Polymarket began geo-blocking US users.

A platform still based in New York, run by an American founder, still serving global political and financial events, was forced to shift core trading outside the US, even though many events discussed still occurred within it.

Exile and Explosion

After the CFTC penalty, Polymarket entered a strange state. It didn't die but was no longer whole. It still operated, could serve overseas users, continued launching markets, but lost its most critical, symbolic home market.

For a New York-based company, this state was awkward. It wasn't total failure, as the product lived; nor true success, as US users were blocked. It was more like exile: the company was in the US, but the product had to pretend the US didn't exist.

In May 2022, former CFTC Chairman J. Christopher Giancarlo joined Polymarket's advisory board as chair. Giancarlo, known as "CryptoDad" in crypto circles, made the signaling intent clear: after regulatory blows, Polymarket began building a compliance narrative.

But a compliance narrative couldn't instantly change the situation. An advisory board wasn't a license, and a former regulator's name didn't automatically open the US market. From 2022 to 2023, Polymarket entered a trough. Operating purely overseas, its scale contracted. By the end of 2023, cumulative total trading volume was around $73 million. This figure was still respectable then but seemed like another era compared to the 2024 election cycle explosion.

Trough periods are hardest to write about and easiest to overlook because they lack a repeatedly referenced photo, a headline-worthy tweet, or the drama of a regulatory raid. But for a startup, fate is often decided in such times: no applause, slow growth, external narratives cooling, while the team must daily fix the product, manage markets, explain settlements, and maintain liquidity.

Coplan didn't give up. The team kept iterating: improving mobile experience, making pages lighter, orders smoother, reducing friction points—wallets, gas, on-chain confirmations—that scared off non-crypto users. Prediction market theory can be grand, but users often leave over small reasons: slow loading, unclear settlements, ambiguous market questions, poor mobile usability. Polymarket from 2022 to 2023 survived in these small details.

It also waited for the next public event to bring people back to prediction markets. Not all waiting feels heroic. Sometimes, persistence is maintaining a fringe product until the next news cycle arrives, even when no one thinks you'll win.

The Titan Submersible Incident

That news cycle arrived, unglamorously.

In June 2023, OceanGate's Titan submersible lost contact en route to the Titanic wreck. Global media began continuous coverage of rescue efforts. Search vessels on the surface, experts in news studios explaining oxygen timelines, social media flooded with fear, voyeurism, anger, and dark humor. Each passing hour made the event more like an unavoidable public tragedy.

OceanGate used its "Titan" vessel to take tourists deep below sea level to visit the Titanic wreck site before it was lost

Polymarket quickly launched a market: "Will the submersible be found by June 23?" Betting volume exceeded $2 million. The official Polymarket account even replied to musician Rico Nasty's viral tweet: "Still a 15% chance they find them by Friday."

This put Polymarket in the spotlight, but not in a good way. Critics called it gambling on human tragedy, turning death and rescue into odds. Supporters argued the market didn't create tragedy; it just made explicit the judgments people were already discussing. Both sides had a point.

Subsequently, the US Coast Guard announced debris discovery, indicating a catastrophic implosion. Settlement triggered controversy over the definition of "found," requiring UMA oracle arbitration. This exposed a deeper prediction market problem: real-world events aren't as clean as contract terms. A word, a timestamp, a press conference could decide the settlement of millions.

The Titan incident didn't earn Polymarket praise but brought it attention. Platform Google searches hit a then-all-time high. It proved a somewhat brutal fact: any news can be marketized. Politics, disasters, war, tech, entertainment—if the public cares enough and outcomes are uncertain, they can become a price.

From this moment, Polymarket was no longer just a political prediction tool. It became more like a shadow market for the news world. News provides headlines; markets provide probabilities. Media generates attention; prices absorb it. The more chaotic, controversial, and lacking consensus an event is, the more suitable for Polymarket trading.

This path led to the 2024 US election.

Another Election Cycle

2024 saw US politics re-enter high pressure. Trump sought a White House return, Biden aimed for re-election, with inflation, immigration, war, culture clashes, and anxiety over democracy itself intertwined. News screens filled daily with red-blue maps, swing states, court cases, rallies, and poll curves.

This was Polymarket's perfect timing.

In May 2024, Polymarket disclosed two funding rounds totaling $70 million. Series A was $25 million led by General Catalyst, with participation from Airbnb co-founder Joe Gebbia. Series B was $45 million led by Founders Fund, with personal participation from Vitalik Buterin; 1confirmation, ParaFi, Dragonfly, Kevin Hartz were also on the list. Combined with the 2020 seed round, total funding exceeded $70 million.

Founders Fund partner Joey Krug later gave an accurate explanation: "Internally at Founders Fund we developed a habit of checking Polymarket at times of breaking news." This was more telling than typical investor backing. It showed Polymarket had evolved from a trading product to a conditioned reflex for some during breaking news.

In the summer of 2024, FiveThirtyEight founder Nate Silver joined Polymarket as an advisor. This move further solidified Polymarket's "information tool" positioning. It was no longer just crypto circles claiming to be faster than media; it brought one of America's most知名的 poll analysis brands into its narrative.

The real turning point came after June 27.

Following the US presidential debate that day, Biden's performance triggered massive震动 within the Democratic Party and media ecosystem. TV replayed clips,短视频 snippets spread on social media, anonymous party leaks emerged, donors panicked, the White House tried damage control, the campaign team insisted all was normal. All information collided within days.

Mainstream political discourse struggled to maintain the "he'll stay in" narrative. Many sensed a problem in the room, but no one wanted to be first to state it as结论. Polymarket's prices had no such burden of decorum. Markets don't wait for press conferences or public endorsements; they need traders constantly adjusting judgments with capital. So, while media and political systems searched for language, Polymarket began rapidly reflecting another possibility: Biden might withdraw.

This was Polymarket's moment shifting from passive exile to active counteroffensive. It no longer just followed news; it gave a market signal before the news system formed consensus. For Coplan, this was more important than mere trading volume growth. It proved the story Polymarket wanted to tell: prediction markets aren't casinos but a faster information aggregation mechanism.

From July to October that year, Polymarket became a standard reference source in mainstream political news. It successfully foreshadowed Biden's withdrawal and predicted Trump's choice of JD Vance as VP. Increasingly, journalists, investors, and political observers began treating Polymarket as a real-time public sentiment dashboard.

Polymarket's TVL growth during the 2024 US election period, Source: DefiLlama

Polymarket's trading volume growth during the 2024 US election period, Source: DUNE

Simultaneously, the "Trump Whale" controversy erupted. A former French bank trader, referred to as Théo in media, bet over $45 million on a Trump victory via accounts like Fredi9999, Theo4, PrincessCaro, Michie. The WSJ first reported the whale's activity, raising manipulation concerns. Polymarket's investigation found no evidence of manipulation.

The controversy's core wasn't just one person's bet size but that Polymarket finally faced the inevitable problem of its own success: if a prediction market starts influencing public narrative, is it merely reflecting information or also creating it?

On November 7, Coplan appeared on CNBC's Squawk Box, completing his first-ever TV interview. Shortly after, he received a call from Mar-a-Lago senior figures. In a Fortune interview, he said: "I've learned that anything is possible. Turning dreams into reality has never felt more tangible, and luckily I'm a dreamer. The world is shaped and changed by optimists."

This sounded like a victor's declaration. The problem is, Polymarket's story was never a simple victory narrative. Each time it proved itself more useful, it also pushed itself into a more dangerous position.

Fifteen days later, danger knocked.

FBI Knocks Down the Door

November 13, 2024, 6 AM, New York not yet fully awake. Coplan, who had just been explaining prediction markets on TV days before, was jolted awake by loud bangs. According to his later CBS 60 Minutes interview recollection, FBI agents used a battering ram. The door crashed open, agents entered his apartment, seizing phones and electronic devices.

No arrest, no charges, no public explanation of the specific investigation reason.

From Election Night's $3.6 billion trading volume, to the Mar-a-Lago call, to the FBI's battering ram—just eight days apart. A 26-year-old founder, having just reached the center of global political narrative, stood barefoot in his home watching federal agents take his devices. For Coplan, this wasn't ordinary legal risk but a deeper uncertainty: he didn't know the investigation's specific target, whether he was the target or a related person, or if the mainstream recognition his company just gained would instantly become new evidence.

Hours later, he logged into X on a new phone, posting: "new phone, who dis?"

This post was repeatedly quoted because it almost perfectly captured Coplan's and Polymarket's stance: no explanation, no示弱, responding to the federal government's battering ram with a flippant internet slang phrase. It was like a joke and a rebellion.

Shortly after, he posted a more serious message: "It's discouraging that the current administration would seek a last-ditch effort to go after companies they deem to be associated with political opponents. Polymarket has provided value to tens of millions of people this election cycle, while causing harm to nobody."

A Polymarket spokesperson framed it more directly: "This is obvious political retribution by the outgoing administration." Elon Musk commented on X: "This seems messed up."

But critics saw a different problem. Polymarket, having promised to block US users after the 2022 CFTC penalty, was now processing tens of billions during a US election and deeply influencing US political narrative. Even if the platform claimed US users couldn't trade, regulators had reason to ask: Were these geo-blocks truly effective? Were US users still accessing via various means? Did Polymarket violate the 2022 settlement terms?

The FBI raid brought all contradictions to the surface. Polymarket could call itself an information market, claim it harmed no one, say it just made truth appear faster. But in regulators' eyes, it might still be an unpermitted event contract market in the US. The more successful it became, the less it could hide behind the "niche crypto product" shell.

Three weeks later, Coplan appeared on stage at the New York Times DealBook Summit. The venue was Jazz at Lincoln Center, midtown Manhattan—far from the bathroom office, close to Wall Street and media centers. The audience included Wall Street fund managers, Silicon Valley tech executives, and political commentators. Lights, cameras, badges, security, media rows—all belonged to the mainstream world.

For a founder whose home was just searched by the FBI, devices seized, federal investigation still pending, this wasn't an obvious choice. The safer route was low profile, silence, let lawyers handle everything. Coplan chose the opposite. He stepped into the spotlight's center to continue discussing prediction markets' future.

Meanwhile, walls were also rising. By late 2024, French regulators began investigating Polymarket for potential rule violations; the platform subsequently geo-blocked France. Entering early 2025, Singapore, Poland, Belgium, among others,陆续 added Polymarket to lists of illegal gambling or unauthorized platforms.

Individually, these bans might have limited impact on trading volume. But layered atop the FBI search and DOJ/CFTC investigations, they sent the same signal: gray areas were narrowing. National regulatory frameworks lacked a designated slot for "prediction markets."

From late 2024 to early 2025, Coplan and his team's choice became clear. Continuing to circumvent regulation was pointless. The real way out wasn't avoiding regulation but entering it. Not waiting outside the US door for entry, but buying a ticket in.

Homecoming

Forging Ties with the Trump Family

In mid-July 2025, the sword hanging over Polymarket finally fell.

The US DOJ and CFTC closed their investigation into Polymarket without filing any charges, sweeping away three years of legal shadow in an instant. Many said the reason lay in Polymarket's forged connection with the Trump family.

Polymarket also gained the chance to execute real expansion plans.

In July 2025, Polymarket acquired QCEX for $112 million. What was acquired wasn't just a name but an entire entry point into the US regulatory framework: CFTC-registered derivatives exchange QCX LLC and its clearing house QC Clearing LLC. QCX would later operate as "Polymarket US."

This step was crucial because Polymarket didn't choose to apply for a license from scratch. That path was too slow, uncertain, and prone to regulatory quagmires. It chose a more direct route: buy an entity that already possessed the license.

On August 26, Donald Trump Jr. joined Polymarket's advisory board. Around the same time, Trump-affiliated 1789 Capital invested in Polymarket. This resembled a pure political exchange, yet it also felt like the real-world echo of the 2024 election.

Polymarket's accurate prediction of Trump's victory caught the Trump camp's attention. By 2025, regulatory environment, political winds, and discussions around prediction market legalization began intertwining. To supporters, this was an innovative product, wrongly expelled, finally gaining a chance to re-enter the US. To critics, it was a gray platform that flipped its fortunes via a political cycle, seeking a position closer to power.

Polymarket never lacked this ambiguity. It resembled both an information market and a gambling platform; both financial infrastructure and a political sentiment machine; it could be framed as a victory for market freedom or a success in regulatory arbitrage. Trump Jr.'s joining just pushed this ambiguity to a more visible position.

In September, the CFTC issued a no-action letter to QCX, substantively allowing Polymarket to operate event contracts in the US through intermediary channels. Coplan praised the CFTC's "impressive work" and "record timing" on X.

Placed beside that 2013 email to the SEC, this statement creates a curious bookend effect. A 14-year-old boy once asked regulators if his exchange idea was legal. Twelve years later, standing behind a platform that processed tens of billions, he finally obtained a path into the US regulatory system.

The NYSE Parent's Check

What truly made the外界 realize Polymarket's身份 shift was the deal on October 7, 2025.

Intercontinental Exchange announced a strategic cash investment in Polymarket of up to $2 billion. ICE is the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, one of the world's most important exchange groups. Polymarket's valuation reached $8 billion, approximately $9 billion post-investment. ICE would also become the global distributor of Polymarket's event data, with both parties collaborating on tokenization.

That same month, Coplan was included in the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Forbes estimated his net worth at around $1 billion, based on holding roughly 11% equity. Age 27. From a 26-year-old dropout whose home was searched by the FBI to one of the youngest self-made billionaires—less than a year apart.

CBS 60 Minutes later asked if he ever thought Polymarket could be worth this much. His response was classic Coplan: "I mean, I didn't start it to not get here, you know?"

Not humble, not surprised, more like saying: I was always heading here.

While capital and regulatory narratives advanced, Polymarket began entering sports, media, and financial data systems. From October to November 2025, partnership announcements密集 emerged. The NHL became the first professional sports league to partner with a prediction market platform. The UFC designated Polymarket as its exclusive official prediction market partner; Dana White and Coplan appeared together on CNBC. Yahoo Finance made Polymarket its exclusive crypto prediction market data provider. Google Search and Google Finance started integrating Polymarket prediction data.

These partnerships seemed scattered but collectively indicated one thing: Polymarket was no longer just a destination; it was becoming others' data layer. Users might not open the Polymarket app daily, but they could see its odds in Google Search, its probabilities on Yahoo Finance, its market signals on sports broadcast pages. Prediction markets evolved from an app users actively visited to a data-content type embeddable in other scenarios.

November 13, the FBI raid's one-year anniversary. Coplan posted on X: "Cheers to free markets, the American dream, and $3000/hr lawyers."

A year prior, he was jolted awake, phones taken, federal agents in his apartment. A year later, he was a billionaire, his company just received a $2 billion strategic investment from ICE, and its path back to the US was about to officially open.

"Free markets"—the ideal Polymarket sold to the world. "American dream"—the story it told itself. "$3000/hr lawyers"—the cost the ideal and story must pay within American reality.

On November 25, the CFTC issued a revised Order of Designation, formally approving Polymarket (via QCX) as a regulated Designated Contract Market. US users could trade via FCMs and traditional brokerage channels as intermediaries. Polymarket entered the same regulatory framework as CME and ICE.

January 2022: CFTC penalized Polymarket, saying it couldn't offer event contracts that way. November 2025: CFTC, via another legal entity and regulatory path, allowed Polymarket to return to the US as a regulated market. The door that was closed wasn't broken down; its lock was replaced. Coplan didn't bypass rules; he bought an entry within the rules and had regulators open the door.

In December, Polymarket US launched in limited scope, ending nearly three years of US market absence since the 2022 penalty. This "homecoming" wasn't romantic. No product button could erase three years of gray area, no approval document could make all controversy disappear. But it completed a clear action: the platform driven out of the US returned via the regulatory path.

On December 1, Anderson Cooper's lengthy 60 Minutes interview aired. Coplan sat within America's most traditional TV news format, explaining to the broadest audience what Polymarket truly is.

He said: "Polymarket is the most accurate thing we have as mankind right now."

He also said: "People rely on Polymarket because we provide clarity where there is confusion and accountability where there is ambiguity."

Clarity amidst confusion, accountability amidst ambiguity. For a product long accused of being a gambling platform, this was an ambitious redefinition.

On December 11, Coplan was named to CoinDesk's "Most Influential 2025" list. By this point, Polymarket's turnaround was complete: investigation closed, licensed entry acquired, CFTC clearance, ICE investment, mainstream media endorsement, US market reopened.

If the story stopped here, it would be a standard victorious ending. But Polymarket's new normal wasn't peace; it was a larger battlefield.

Polymarket's 6th Year

On January 7, 2026, the Dow Jones/WSJ data distribution agreement took effect, bringing Polymarket's prediction data into the Wall Street Journal's content ecosystem. This move wasn't as轰动 as the ICE investment but was significant: prediction market prices began entering news industry production workflows.

Previously, news reported events, markets traded events. Now, market prices themselves became part of the news. When journalists cover an election, a rate cut, a sports event, Polymarket's probabilities can be cited like polls, odds, or futures prices. It evolved from an object reported by media to a tool media uses to report on the world.

Days later, this instrumentalization entered a more mainstream场景.

On January 11, the 83rd Golden Globes live broadcast首次 displayed Polymarket odds. Red carpets, gowns, stars, trophies, and prediction market odds appeared in the same frame. Polymarket ultimately correctly predicted 26 out of 28 awards.

Coplan wrote on X: "The single most mainstream prediction market integration to date. A surreal moment and a highlight for all our team members' moms."

This wasn't for regulators or investors; it felt more like a young team suddenly seeing their creation appear on a TV show their parents watch. But反对声 arose simultaneously. Critics called it "gambling meets dystopia." When everything can be predicted, traded, placed into live broadcasts, does the world become clearer or colder?

On January 27, Polymarket became the exclusive prediction market partner for all MLS competitions. Sports became a new battleground. Compared to politics, sports outcomes are more frequent, clearer, easier to consume; compared to traditional gambling, prediction markets can position themselves as closer to trading and information.

In February, Polymarket piloted taker fees on sports markets, initially covering NCAA and Serie A. Crypto market fees had already achieved weekly revenue of ~$1.08 million. Charging fees signaled a new phase: no longer just proving交易量 and information value, but systematically proving business models.

That same month, former Fanatics CBO Ari Borod joined as President of Sports Business Development. Fanatics had sued to阻止 his跳槽, later settling out of court. This minor episode also indicated something: Polymarket's entry into sports wasn't just a crypto company expanding categories; it was competing with traditional sports business, gambling companies, and media rights holders for talent and position.

On February 4, Blockratize, Inc. applied for "POLY" and "$POLY" trademarks. CMO Matthew Modabber had already stated clearly: "There will be a token, there will be an airdrop."

This brought Polymarket's storyline back to its crypto origins. On one hand, it entered the CFTC framework, partnered with ICE, provided data to WSJ and Google. On the other, the market still expected it to issue a token, conduct an airdrop, redistribute platform value to crypto users. This was another tension for Polymarket: the closer it moved toward Wall Street, the less it could sever ties with the crypto community. Because those who first believed in it, first used it, first brought liquidity were precisely those willing to bet on the world on-chain.

Polymarket's store in New York

In March, ICE追加 invested $600 million, raising the valuation to ~$15 billion. That same month, Polymarket signed an exclusive multi-year prediction market partnership with MLB, reportedly worth up to $300 million.

On March 18, Polymarket acquired DeFi infrastructure company Brahma. Founded in 2021, Brahma had processed over $1 billion in trading volume. Post-acquisition, the独立 product was shut down within 30 days, with team and tech fully integrated. The direction: lowering on-chain usage barriers—wallet creation, funding, token swaps, the friction points that deter ordinary users from链上 products.

Coplan said: "Building reliable infrastructure across blockchain networks and traditional financial rails is hard—there are no shortcuts."

This statement fits Polymarket in 2026 perfectly. It was no longer just a website, not just a prediction market frontend, but straddling two infrastructure systems simultaneously: blockchain networks and traditional financial rails. One demands openness, speed, global liquidity; the other demands licenses, clearing, intermediaries, compliance. Polymarket's true difficulty wasn't getting users to click yes or no, but making these two systems暂时 coexist within one product.

On March 30, Polymarket launched trading fees across all categories, using an inverted parabolic fee model: Crypto peak 1.80%, Finance & Politics 1.00%, Sports 0.75%, Makers免费 with 25% rebate. Market estimates projected annualized revenue exceeding $200 million.

Polymarket advertisement inside a New York subway station, Source: Bloomberg

In June 2026, Polymarket celebrated its sixth anniversary since launch.

Six years ago, it was a small product born in a bathroom during New York's lockdown. Six years later, it entered Google, WSJ, sports leagues, ICE, CFTC regulatory frameworks, and mainstream TV broadcasts. Cumulative trading volume, valuation, partners, regulatory status—every metric seemed to prove its journey from fringe to center.

But the sixth anniversary isn't a fairy-tale ending.

The CFTC proposed formally allowing sports event contracts while limiting sensitive markets like injuries, high school sports. Bipartisan senators introduced the "Prediction Markets are Gambling Act," attempting to prohibit CFTC-authorized platforms from offering sports contracts. Wired reported US users still heavily used Polymarket's offshore international site. Valuation reportedly approached $20 billion. The $POLY token and airdrop remained anticipated, with market prediction probability of TGE completion within 2026 maintaining around 62%-70%.

Coplan completed his homecoming. But the America he returned to wasn't the 2020 version.

America in 2020 was still searching for answers amidst pandemic and election; Polymarket was a newly launched small tool. America in 2026 knew this tool could influence narratives, attract capital, challenge polls, entangle regulation, enter sports leagues and mainstream media. The door was open, but the living room was full of regulators, investors, journalists, league executives, traders, lawyers, and critics.

So "homecoming" wasn't the story's end but a change of identity. On its sixth anniversary, Polymarket finally stood where it most wanted to be: the world is starting to take information markets seriously.

But this also means the world is finally starting to seriously judge it.

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Связанные с этим вопросы

QWhat was the initial inspiration and starting point for Polymarket?

APolymarket was born in 2020 during the New York City COVID-19 lockdowns. Founder Shayne Coplan, a 21-year-old dropout who was running out of money and inspiration, developed the product in a makeshift 'bathroom office' in his Lower East Side apartment. The core idea was to create a market where people could use price to make collective predictions about uncertain real-world events, such as the pandemic, faster than traditional media or experts.

QWhy was Polymarket forced to geoblock US users in 2022?

AIn January 2022, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) issued a cease-and-desist order and fined Polymarket $1.4 million. The CFTC alleged that Polymarket was operating unregistered event-based binary options markets, which are considered off-exchange contracts not offered on a designated contract market. As part of the settlement, Polymarket was required to wind down the non-compliant markets and geoblock users from the United States.

QHow did the 2024 U.S. election cycle become a major turning point for Polymarket?

AThe 2024 U.S. election was a pivotal moment for Polymarket. During the June presidential debate, President Biden's performance triggered widespread uncertainty. While mainstream media hesitated, prices on Polymarket rapidly shifted to reflect a significant possibility of Biden dropping out of the race, demonstrating the platform's ability to aggregate information faster than traditional news cycles. This, along with predicting Trump's VP pick, cemented Polymarket's reputation as a crucial real-time information tool for journalists, investors, and political observers, leading to massive trading volume growth and mainstream attention.

QWhat key strategic moves did Polymarket make to re-enter and become compliant in the U.S. market?

ATo legally re-enter the U.S. market, Polymarket executed a multi-part strategy in 2025: 1) Acquiring QCEX (later renamed Polymarket US), a CFTC-registered derivatives exchange and clearinghouse, providing a regulated entity to operate under. 2) Garnering political connections, including adding Donald Trump Jr. to its advisory board and receiving investment from Trump-linked 1789 Capital. 3) Obtaining a crucial no-action letter from the CFTC, allowing Polymarket to offer event contracts to U.S. users through registered intermediaries. 4) Securing a massive $2 billion strategic investment from Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange.

QWhat are the major tensions or challenges Polymarket faces as it enters its sixth year?

AIn its sixth year, Polymarket faces several significant tensions: 1) **Regulatory and Political Scrutiny:** Despite CFTC approval, some U.S. senators are proposing bills to classify prediction markets as gambling, aiming to block sports-related contracts. 2) **Dual Identity:** It must balance being a crypto-native platform (with an expected token/airdrop) with being a regulated financial data provider integrated with giants like ICE, WSJ, and Google. 3) **Ethical Criticism:** It continues to face criticism for 'monetizing' human tragedies and public events, labeled by some as dystopian gambling. 4) **Business Model Pressure:** As it scales into sports and media, it must prove a sustainable revenue model through fees while navigating competition with traditional sportsbooks and media companies.

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