Polymarket Resolves Bitcoin Sale Dispute to 'No,' $80M in Bets at Stake
A contentious $80 million prediction market on Polymarket regarding whether MicroStrategy, referred to as "Strategy" in the market, would sell Bitcoin (BTC) by May 31 has officially resolved to "No." Despite MicroStrategy later disclosing it sold 32 BTC during the timeframe, the platform's UMA Optimistic Oracle system upheld the "No" result after two rounds of disputes.
Over 98% of the 607 voting participants supported the "No" resolution, according to data from Betmoar. Polymarket justified its decision by stating that no credible on-chain data or reporting confirmed the sale within the market's deadline. MicroStrategy only disclosed the transaction in a filing after the cutoff, which Polymarket argued disqualified it under the market's strict timing criteria.
This decision has reignited criticism of Polymarket's dispute resolution model, which relies on UMA token-weighted voting. Critics argue this structure disproportionately favors large token holders, leading to concerns about fairness and potential manipulation. For instance, the largest voter in the dispute, linked to the wallet borntoolate.eth, held over 3.11 million UMA tokens and reportedly netted $299,000 from voting on disputes. Another wallet associated with Kevin Chan earned over $370,000.
Galaxy Research, which disclosed it held a financial interest in the market, criticized the resolution process in a statement via X (formerly Twitter), saying, "Prediction markets should price what happens, not how the oracle will reinterpret rules after the fact." Galaxy also proposed structural changes, including locking criteria at market listing and implementing deterministic resolutions for verifiable events, to improve system integrity.
Broader Implications for Prediction Markets
The controversy highlights ongoing challenges in decentralized prediction markets, which use blockchain-based systems like UMA to resolve disputes. While disputes are relatively rare—just 1.0% of 18,427 markets studied between May 2025 and May 2026—high-profile cases like this one and a 2025 Ukraine minerals market have exposed vulnerabilities in the model.
The timing of the dispute is also notable, as it coincides with increased regulatory scrutiny. On June 3, U.S. House Democrats called on the Federal Trade Commission to investigate how prediction markets advertise and position themselves with regulators. With nearly $1 billion in trading volume tied to disputed markets between May 2025 and May 2026, according to academic research, the stakes for platforms like Polymarket are significant.
Market Impact
Bitcoin's broader market performance offers additional context to the dispute. As of June 4, BTC is trading at $62,299, reflecting a 7.08% decline over the past 24 hours. The ongoing macroeconomic uncertainty and regulatory headwinds have likely intensified volatility, making prediction markets on high-profile events even more contentious for traders and speculators.
As Polymarket continues to refine its dispute resolution framework, including layering a native extension on top of UMA, the platform's ability to address concerns around fairness and transparency will be critical. For now, traders burned by disputed outcomes will likely remain skeptical, especially as the industry faces mounting regulatory and reputational challenges.
For traders leveraging prediction markets, this serves as a stark reminder of the risks tied to ambiguous rules and token-weighted governance systems. Proceeding with caution—and a clear understanding of how disputes are resolved—will be essential in navigating this evolving space.