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Last week, I observed something interesting in the crypto markets: during Bitcoin's sudden drop, I noticed that two different markets reacted completely opposite to each other. While derivatives traders quickly rushed to hedge, bettors in prediction markets hardly moved. It was as if they were playing in two different worlds.
Data from Deribit clearly shows this: demand for $75,000 put options suddenly spiked, while over $500 million in leveraged long positions were liquidated within 24 hours. But what about the monthly contracts on Polymarket? They just slowly eroded. Why such a difference? Because prediction markets only look at the final outcome — it doesn't matter how fast the decline happens along the way, only where it ends at the end of the month. Derivative desks, on the other hand, operate under opposite incentives: they are immediately affected by short-term volatility.
While Bitcoin is currently trading around $71,500 and Ethereum near $2,200, Asian stock markets are mixed; Chinese factory data came in strong, but investors remain cautious. Those who profit from this kind of volatility are usually quick to act. Prediction markets are structurally lagging — this prevents us from fully understanding how the real risk is distributed in the market.