Poly Marks

Andrew, Matt, and Joel

Poly Marks is a humorous podcast where brothers Andrew, Matt, and moderator Joel explore Polymarket’s markets, share their betting mishaps, and debate trends with sibling flair.

  1. 3 ngày trước

    #30. Buying the Dip(lomacy)

    Send us Fan Mail Episode 30 of the Poly Marks Podcast dives headfirst back into the Strait of Hormuz crisis, as the boys break down the latest rumors of a U.S.–Iran memorandum of understanding, whether the ceasefire is actually real, and why prediction markets still seem convinced that global shipping is about to normalize. Andrew explains why nearly half his portfolio is riding on Strait traffic not returning by the end of June, while the crew debates whether the market is dramatically underpricing the logistical, political, and military obstacles still standing in the way. From oil markets and strategic reserves to sanctions relief, IRGC financing, and the razor-thin line between “defensive” and “offensive” strikes, the episode explores how fragile the current standoff really is — and why even a signed agreement may not stop things from spiraling again. The guys also unpack the “permanent peace deal” markets, arguing over legal wording, temporary agreements, and whether Israel, Hezbollah, and Iran are simply too far apart for any lasting settlement to happen this summer. Later, the conversation shifts into 2028 U.S. presidential betting markets, with speculation on Kamala Harris, Thomas Massie, Ron DeSantis, Wes Moore, Tucker Carlson, and why the best political bets might be names nobody’s seriously discussing yet. The crew debates whether prediction markets reward actual forecasting skill — or just timing, volatility, and surviving long enough for the narrative to flip in your favor. The episode closes with NBA Finals chaos, Trump potentially attending games in New York, Israeli leadership markets involving Netanyahu and Naftali Bennett, and another reminder that betting on the future may still be easier than predicting it.

    43 phút
  2. 16 thg 4

    #26. Blockade Squared

    Send us Fan Mail Ep. 26 opens with a rare mix of victory laps and bruised portfolios. Andrew nails the “US troops entering Iran” market after a dramatic pilot rescue mission inside Iranian territory, while the rest of the board is licking wounds from the surprise ceasefire announcement that nuked their long-held no-ceasefire positions. The ceasefire is technically holding—for now—but with immediate violations, a US blockade around Hormuz, and zero trust between parties, the guys debate whether this is real de-escalation or just a pause with better PR. They pivot back to their favorite indicator: Strait of Hormuz traffic, arguing that even with a ceasefire, mines, insurance risk, and now US enforcement mean shipping flows are nowhere near normal. Andrew doubles down on “no normalization” bets, while Matt zooms out to ask the bigger question—are markets right that this all resolves within months, or are they massively underpricing how messy this could still get? From there, it’s a broader reflection on negotiation dynamics. Is Trump actually cracking something previous administrations couldn’t—forcing ideological enemies to the table through sheer escalation and threat? Or is this just another temporary patch that unravels the second incentives shift? The crew debates whether a “permanent peace” deal is even plausible in the timeline markets suggest, with most leaning skeptical despite improving sentiment. They close on macro confusion: oil markets refusing to behave logically despite massive supply disruptions, and a quick check-in on the AI bubble, where absurd pivots (yes, even shoe companies to data centers) collide with very real constraints like compute and energy shortages. The takeaway: nothing is pricing cleanly, and conviction is getting harder—not easier.

    1 giờ
  3. 21 thg 3

    #24. Oil Up, Odds Down, Offramps Out

    Send us Fan Mail Ep. 24 is another full-blown Iran board, with the guys zeroing in on the biggest market-moving development so far: the Strait of Hormuz is still effectively shut, the Gulf is jammed with stranded ships, and the economic fallout is starting to look worse by the day. Andrew runs point on the situation, walking through Iran’s strikes on Qatari LNG infrastructure, the oil spike, trapped vessels, and the ugly reality that even if America wants the strait reopened, mines and fear can keep commerce frozen long after the missiles stop flying. From there, the discussion turns into a live portfolio review. Matt asks the big question: after loading up on long-dated no ceasefire bets and seeing them surge, is it time to peel some off or keep riding? The consensus leans toward staying patient. Nobody sees a clean offramp. Trump may want one, but Iran has no real incentive to fold quickly, and the broader regional dynamics make a quick ceasefire feel more fantasy than base case. The boys also revisit the “US forces entering Iran” angle, with Andrew arguing that if America wants to de-escalate, it may actually need to escalate first — and Kharg Island becomes a major point of discussion as a possible next target and strategic hinge. The back half broadens into macro and markets. They talk through how a prolonged Gulf crisis could hammer the world economy, why oil bets are suddenly live again, and whether the administration has badly underestimated the difficulty of securing maritime flow. Then Joel finally cashes in his teaser from last week and brings up the IPO board: SpaceX, Databricks, Anthropic, and the wider idea that the White House and regulators may be trying to reopen the public-markets spigot while sentiment still holds. They finish with a Rubio check-in, noting that his 2028 odds keep climbing while JD Vance stays weirdly absent, and wonder whether Rubio’s foreign-policy glow-up is a launchpad or a future liability if Iran becomes a long war.

    47 phút
  4. 13 thg 3

    #23. Mine Games in the Strait

    Send us Fan Mail Ep. 23 is basically a full Iran panic board. The boys open on the Strait of Hormuz becoming the real story of the war: mines in the water, tankers refusing to run the gauntlet, insurance chaos, oil ripping past $100, and the dawning realization that even if America and Israel own the skies, reopening a mined shipping lane is a totally different problem. Andrew lays out the broader picture: Iranian missiles flying at every American-aligned target in the region, Gulf states getting dragged into the mess, and Trump suddenly looking a lot more exposed than he did after the “easy win” in Venezuela. From there, they get into the market angles. Joel and Matt lean hard into the idea that this thing is not ending quickly, which makes the longer-dated no ceasefire bets look attractive. They also talk through why the off-ramp feels murky: Iran can’t just eat the humiliation and move on, Israel has every reason to keep pushing, and Trump may not have thought through how ugly the Strait of Hormuz problem could get. There’s also a side thread on southern Lebanon, where Matt makes the case for fading the market’s confidence in a major Israeli ground offensive before March 31. The back half widens out a bit. They check in on Rubio, whose odds in the Republican race keep rising as JD Vance seems to disappear from view, and they kick around whether Rubio’s foreign-policy profile is a real asset or a liability if Iran turns into a full quagmire. They close by teasing next week’s IPO talk and admitting, once again, that despite their best intentions, Iran has eaten the whole podcast.

    49 phút

Giới Thiệu

Poly Marks is a humorous podcast where brothers Andrew, Matt, and moderator Joel explore Polymarket’s markets, share their betting mishaps, and debate trends with sibling flair.