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Coinbase CEO Clarifies Viral Quote About Insider Trading on Prediction Markets

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Brian Armstrong says he was misquoted about insider trading on Polymarket, but his actual position is more nuanced than a simple yes or no.

Here's a fun question: If you're trying to figure out what's actually going to happen in the world, do you want people with inside information betting on it? Coinbase Global Inc. (COIN) CEO Brian Armstrong thinks you do, but he's not exactly thrilled about how that message went viral.

The Quote That Wasn't Quite Right

An X user recently posted a clip of Armstrong discussing prediction markets and claimed he said insider trading is "100% necessary" for these platforms. They even attributed a quote to him: "If you want truth about the world, insiders are the only path."

Armstrong quickly pushed back. The "100% necessary" framing oversimplifies his actual position, he said, and he definitely never claimed insiders are the "only path" to truth. But here's where it gets interesting—his real comments aren't that far off from what caused the stir.

What He Really Meant

Armstrong's actual argument is more nuanced. He draws a line between two different uses for prediction markets.

If you're building prediction markets as an asset class where people trade for profit, you absolutely need to prevent insider trading to maintain market integrity. Standard stuff.

But if you're optimizing prediction markets as a tool for discovering what's actually going to happen—essentially treating them as a news source—then you "100% want insider trading" because that's where genuine signal comes from.

His example: Imagine a prediction market asking whether the Suez Canal will be safe to open in July. A Navy Admiral who knows exactly where the Houthis are positioned has real information. Armstrong says you "kind of want that person betting on that market" because they represent the actual source of truth.

The Debate Continues

After Armstrong's correction, the X user acknowledged the phrasing issue but stood by their interpretation. They pointed to Armstrong's exact words at the 52:30 mark of the video: "If you're actually optimizing it for a source of news... you 100% want insider trading."

So was it a misquote or just inconvenient context? Depends on whether you think Armstrong's nuance matters—or if "you 100% want insider trading" pretty much speaks for itself.

Coinbase CEO Clarifies Viral Quote About Insider Trading on Prediction Markets

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Brian Armstrong says he was misquoted about insider trading on Polymarket, but his actual position is more nuanced than a simple yes or no.

Here's a fun question: If you're trying to figure out what's actually going to happen in the world, do you want people with inside information betting on it? Coinbase Global Inc. (COIN) CEO Brian Armstrong thinks you do, but he's not exactly thrilled about how that message went viral.

The Quote That Wasn't Quite Right

An X user recently posted a clip of Armstrong discussing prediction markets and claimed he said insider trading is "100% necessary" for these platforms. They even attributed a quote to him: "If you want truth about the world, insiders are the only path."

Armstrong quickly pushed back. The "100% necessary" framing oversimplifies his actual position, he said, and he definitely never claimed insiders are the "only path" to truth. But here's where it gets interesting—his real comments aren't that far off from what caused the stir.

What He Really Meant

Armstrong's actual argument is more nuanced. He draws a line between two different uses for prediction markets.

If you're building prediction markets as an asset class where people trade for profit, you absolutely need to prevent insider trading to maintain market integrity. Standard stuff.

But if you're optimizing prediction markets as a tool for discovering what's actually going to happen—essentially treating them as a news source—then you "100% want insider trading" because that's where genuine signal comes from.

His example: Imagine a prediction market asking whether the Suez Canal will be safe to open in July. A Navy Admiral who knows exactly where the Houthis are positioned has real information. Armstrong says you "kind of want that person betting on that market" because they represent the actual source of truth.

The Debate Continues

After Armstrong's correction, the X user acknowledged the phrasing issue but stood by their interpretation. They pointed to Armstrong's exact words at the 52:30 mark of the video: "If you're actually optimizing it for a source of news... you 100% want insider trading."

So was it a misquote or just inconvenient context? Depends on whether you think Armstrong's nuance matters—or if "you 100% want insider trading" pretty much speaks for itself.