Betting on Politics - Do Sports Bettors Have Any Edge in Prediction Markets?

SharpEddie47

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The 2024 US election was the moment I seriously examined whether my analytical framework transfers to political markets.

Prediction markets had Trump as a significant favorite months before the election when most mainstream polling showed a tighter race. The markets were right. The polls were wrong.

Which produced a specific question: was the prediction market expressing genuine analytical edge or was it expressing a coordinated position by a specific type of participant.

The theory that emerged afterward: a specific class of sophisticated market participant, with better interpretive frameworks for polling data and better models of electoral college arithmetic, had identified the same signal in the data and expressed it through the markets before it reached conventional analysis.

If that's true: the political prediction market had a genuine edge population, similar to the sharp money population in sports betting, and the market price reflected their view before the public view caught up.

Which means the analytical framework transfer might be real.

Or the markets were just lucky and the retrospective narrative is survivorship bias.

Who has actually bet on political markets and found genuine edge versus who has lost money convincing themselves they understood politics better than they did.
 
The public money problem in political betting is real and specific.

Media narrative determines public sentiment on political outcomes in a way that has no direct sports equivalent.

A football team can be observed performing poorly. The evidence is visible and direct.

A political candidate's actual position can be divorced from the media narrative about their position for extended periods.

The 2024 example: mainstream media narrative consistently understated Trump's position relative to the prediction market's implied probability.

The narrative was not reflecting the same underlying data the market was reflecting.

For a bettor oriented toward fading public sentiment: political markets where public sentiment is heavily shaped by narrative rather than data should theoretically produce exploitable mispricings.

The challenge: in sports the public sentiment and the market price converge relatively quickly because results happen frequently and the public updates.

In politics: the public sentiment can diverge from the underlying probability for months. The position requires patience that most bettors don't have and tolerance for drawn-out uncertainty that sports bettors aren't trained for.
 
Political markets on the exchange have been available for twenty years. The Betfair General Election markets have been significant since the 2005 UK election.

The exchange perspective on political versus sports markets.

Sports: high-frequency feedback. Results come in regularly. Participant models update. Market efficiency is maintained through continuous calibration.

Politics: low-frequency feedback. Major political events happen infrequently. Participant models rarely update against realized outcomes. Calibration is slow.

The implication: political markets may remain inefficient for longer than sports markets because the calibration mechanism is weaker.

A sports model built on hundreds of results can be validated quickly.

A political model that predicts election outcomes can only validate against one or two events per cycle.

The low calibration frequency means genuine edge is harder to build and harder to confirm. But also that genuine mispricings might persist longer because fewer well-calibrated participants exist.
 
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