Can You Make a Steady Profit by Blindly Following Polymarket's Pre-Game Win Probability to Bet on NBA Games?

Odaily星球日报2026-04-17 tarihinde yayınlandı2026-04-17 tarihinde güncellendi

Özet

**Can You Consistently Profit by Blindly Following Pre-Game Win Probabilities on Polymarket for NBA Games?** A backtest of the entire NBA 2025-26 regular season (1,096 games) was conducted to test the strategy of always betting $100 on the team with the higher pre-game win probability on Polymarket. The results show that this strategy is not profitable. The total amount wagered was $109,600, with a return of $107,545.20, resulting in a net loss of $2,054 and a Return on Investment (ROI) of -1.87%. This indicates that the market is highly efficient, and pre-game probabilities are accurately priced, leaving no simple arbitrage opportunity. In fact, blindly following the market would have been slightly less profitable than betting against it. However, a deeper analysis by team revealed significant differences. Certain teams consistently outperformed market expectations when they were favored to win: * Portland Trail Blazers (POR): 19% ROI * Philadelphia 76ers (PHI): 14% ROI * San Antonio Spurs (SAS): 12% ROI * Los Angeles Lakers (LAL): 11% ROI * Charlotte Hornets (CHA): 9% ROI In contrast, the market was highly efficient for the top-performing teams, offering minimal returns (e.g., Boston Celtics ROI: 4%, Denver Nuggets ROI: -5%). Results for the weakest teams were too inconsistent due to small sample sizes. The key finding is that team-specific factors, rather than the probability percentage itself, drive potential value, making a one-size-fits-all strategy ineffec...

Trading NBA games on Polymarket, perhaps you, like many others, have had this experience: before the game, you see one team with a significantly higher win probability than their opponent, only for them to collapse in the fourth quarter and get swept away by a scoring run (like the recent Hornets and Heat game—I lost so much on that bet it made me question my life).

Since everyone says Polymarket is a "truth machine," does that mean I can easily make money by blindly buying the team with the higher pre-game win probability?

To test this hypothesis, I backtested the 1,096 regular-season games of the NBA 2025-26 season. The data revealed the truth—

Blindly following the market won't make you money, but it won't lose you much either; the pre-game probabilities are fully priced in.

Blindly Buying the Market Favorite is a Guaranteed Loss

The backtesting strategy was very simple:

  • Used the average probability from 3 minutes before the game as a benchmark
  • Traded $100 on each game
  • Always bought the side with the "higher win probability"

Results:

  • Total amount wagered: $109,600. Total amount returned: $107,545.20. Net loss: $2,054.
  • ROI: -1.87%

This shows that Polymarket's prices are quite efficient; the market has fully priced in the teams' win probabilities, leaving no "arbitrage" opportunity.

The difference in ROI likely comes from other dimensions like transaction costs and emotional premiums. If you insist on "buying blindly," you might as well bet against the market—you could even make a 1.87% profit.

The Real Value: Not All Teams Are Created Equal

The above backtest was for the entire set of a thousand games. I then broke it down from multiple angles to try and find parts that break free from the market's gravity:

  • By week: Random walk
  • By probability: Still a random walk. That is, betting on pre-game win probabilities of 50%, 60%, 70%, or 80% showed no difference in returns.
  • By team: Here, clear differences emerged.

Some teams simply live up to the market's trust—

When the market thinks they will win, they are more likely to actually win.

  • POR (Trail Blazers): ROI 19%
  • PHI (76ers): ROI 14%
  • SAS (Spurs): ROI 12%
  • LAL (Lakers): ROI 11%
  • CHA (Hornets): ROI 9%

Why is there such a difference for these teams? As the author previously had little understanding of NBA teams themselves, an initial hypothesis was formed:

Are they the strongest or the weakest teams, thus having high expectation consistency?

But upon verification, this was not the case. Except for SAS (Spurs), the other four teams were only ranked in the middle to slightly above average positions.

So what about the teams with the best records? The market has already fully priced them in. Blindly buying them yields an average ROI of only 2.16%; the pre-game betting odds contain no水分 (water/hidden value).

  • DET (Pistons): ROI 1%
  • BOS (Celtics): ROI 4%
  • NYK (Knicks): ROI 3%
  • OKC (Thunder): ROI -2%
  • DEN (Nuggets): ROI -5%

What about the weakest teams?

Here, there is extreme divergence instead. These teams are almost never favored by the market. For example, the Nets (BKN) were only favored (win probability >50%) in 7 games, won 5 of them, resulting in a high ROI of 21%; while the Pacers (IND) were favored in 8 games, won 4, but had an ROI of -20%. The sample size is too small to serve as a trading reference.

This means, theoretically (only theoretically!), POR (Trail Blazers), PHI (76ers), SAS (Spurs), LAL (Lakers), and CHA (Hornets) are the range defined by the existing data for following.

İlgili Sorular

QAccording to the article, can you consistently make a profit by blindly following the pre-game win probability on Polymarket for NBA games?

ANo, the article's backtest of the 2025-26 NBA season showed that blindly buying the team with the higher pre-game win probability resulted in an overall loss of 1.87%, indicating the market is efficiently priced.

QWhat was the return on investment (ROI) for the simple strategy of always buying the 'higher win rate' team before each game?

AThe ROI for the strategy was -1.87%, meaning a loss of $2,054 on a total investment of $109,600 across 1,096 games.

QWhich specific NBA teams, according to the data, provided a positive ROI when their pre-game win probability was high?

AThe teams with a positive ROI were POR (Trail Blazers) at 19%, PHI (76ers) at 14%, SAS (Spurs) at 12%, LAL (Lakers) at 11%, and CHA (Hornets) at 9%.

QDid the ROI vary significantly when the strategy was applied to the strongest teams in the league?

ANo, the ROI for the strongest teams was very low, averaging only 2.16%, indicating the market had already efficiently priced their high pre-game win probabilities.

QWhat conclusion does the article draw about the overall efficiency of the Polymarket for NBA games?

AThe article concludes that the Polymarket is a 'truth machine' and its prices are quite efficient, as the market has fully priced in team win probabilities, leaving no simple arbitrage opportunity for a blind-follow strategy.

İlgili Okumalar

Raising Interest Rates Is Not a Tech Killer, EPS Is: A Strategy for Discarding the Weak and Retaining the Strong After the AI Theme's Sharp Decline

**Summary: Rising Interest Rates Are Not the Killer of Tech; EPS Is: The "Keep the Strong, Ditch the Weak" Strategy After the AI Theme Plunge** The author argues that the sharp sell-off in tech and AI-related stocks, triggered by a strong US jobs report that heightened Fed rate hike fears, represents a "pullback to pick up passengers" rather than a "car crash." The true end of a tech bull market is not determined by an extra 25 basis point hike, but by industry overcapacity and the disproval of earnings per share (EPS) expectations. Historical analysis shows that during past rate hike cycles, the Nasdaq-100 often outperformed, provided EPS growth remained strong. The current phase is seen as a shift from a "broad narrative-driven rally" to a "focused verification stage" for AI. The investment strategy should be to "keep the strong, ditch the weak." * **Retain exposure** to high-conviction AI infrastructure leaders with clear order visibility, stable margins, strong cash flow, and upward EPS revisions (e.g., AI servers, advanced packaging, optical modules, key cloud suppliers). * **Reduce exposure** to high-beta, narrative-driven stocks with unclear profit paths (e.g., some quantum computing, space, or speculative chip stocks), especially on rebounds. Valuation concerns should focus on whether earnings can catch up to high multiples, not on high P/E alone. Crowded positioning signals a concentration into quality assets, not necessarily a market top. The upcoming Q2 earnings season will be a key validation point. The core principle is to hold stocks with proven EPS, while using macro events (CPI data, central bank meetings) to manage timing and risk.

marsbit31 dk önce

Raising Interest Rates Is Not a Tech Killer, EPS Is: A Strategy for Discarding the Weak and Retaining the Strong After the AI Theme's Sharp Decline

marsbit31 dk önce

The Largest IPO in History Ignites Heated Debate: Is SpaceX Worth $1.77 Trillion?

SpaceX's potential IPO is priced at $135 per share, aiming to raise $75 billion and valuing the company at approximately $1.77 trillion, which would make it the largest IPO in history. This valuation has sparked intense debate among investors. Bullish analysts, including major underwriters Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, argue the valuation is justified by SpaceX's long-term potential. They see it not just as a rocket company but as a future leader in space infrastructure, with key growth drivers being Starlink satellite internet, low-cost rocket launches, and future AI-related ventures. They project revenues reaching hundreds of billions to trillions of dollars by 2030-2040. ARK Invest's model suggests a 2030 enterprise value could reach $2.5 trillion. Bearish analysts from independent research firms like Morningstar, PitchBook, and New Constructs contend the IPO price is excessively high, already pricing in unrealistic future growth. Using DCF and sum-of-the-parts models, they estimate fair value between $780 billion and $1.7 trillion, significantly below the IPO target. They highlight risks such as the speculative nature of AI projections, over-dependence on Elon Musk, high growth expectations, and corporate governance concerns. Trefis set a target price of just $79 per share. While both sides acknowledge SpaceX's unique position in commercial space, the core disagreement centers on whether the $135 share price offers a reasonable margin of safety or is overly optimistic. Despite the valuation controversy, reported strong demand for the IPO indicates significant market interest.

marsbit2 saat önce

The Largest IPO in History Ignites Heated Debate: Is SpaceX Worth $1.77 Trillion?

marsbit2 saat önce

After the Passage of the GENIUS Act and the CLARITY Act, What Is the Correct Architecture for On-Chain Yield?

The article discusses the evolution of on-chain credit, distinguishing three markets: overcollateralized crypto lending, unsecured lending (largely unsuccessful), and asset-backed credit (ABC). ABC, backed by identifiable real-world collateral with legal recourse, is identified as the fastest-growing category and the only one credibly addressing adverse selection—the core problem in credit where the riskiest borrowers self-select. Current growth in on-chain Real World Assets (RWAs), particularly tokenized private credit funds (e.g., Maple Finance, Centrifuge), is substantial but often merely "wraps" existing fund structures, inheriting their risks rather than solving adverse selection at the protocol level. The regulatory landscape is a key driver, with the US GENIUS Act (prohibiting stablecoin issuers from paying yield) and the proposed CLARITY Act (closing loopholes on indirect yield) set to redefine permissible yield-bearing products. This makes vaults (like ERC-4626) the critical architecture—they become the primary compliant vehicle for delivering yield, functioning as issuance, disclosure, distribution, and recovery mechanisms. The author's thesis is that the correct post-GENIUS/CLARITY architecture involves building ABC solutions where credit assessment, structure, and recovery are encoded directly into the smart contract vault layer, moving beyond mere tokenized fund wrappers to solve adverse selection fundamentally and ensure regulatory compliance.

Foresight News2 saat önce

After the Passage of the GENIUS Act and the CLARITY Act, What Is the Correct Architecture for On-Chain Yield?

Foresight News2 saat önce

İşlemler

Spot
Futures
活动图片