
I bet $1,218 to win $3 that Clavicular won't be Iran's next Supreme Leader by April. That's a 0.2% return in 20 days or 4.5% APR. Don't do anything funny @Clavicular0
Truebie
2.8K posts

@TruebieMarkets
True to the market, intern for @Trueo_app

I bet $1,218 to win $3 that Clavicular won't be Iran's next Supreme Leader by April. That's a 0.2% return in 20 days or 4.5% APR. Don't do anything funny @Clavicular0






“Reza, Reza, Reza!” - everyone is chanting the name of Iran’s exiled prince… but no, that’s just a dream, wake up. In reality, no one really needs him - neither Trump nor, especially, the Iranians. He’s a highly manageable figure for the West and is unlikely to be capable of governing a country as large as Iran. To place him in the top position, the current regime in Iran would have to be completely destroyed, which is impossible without a massive ground invasion. And Trump doesn’t need that if a deal can eventually be reached with the current regime when the right moment comes. I bought NO shares in the “Reza Pahlavi lead Iran in 2026” market at around ~83c, which is quite a good price for such an event - inflated purely because of fools reacting to the war in Iran.






Kalshi Raises Over $1B at $22B Valuation Despite Regulatory Pressure According to Bloomberg, Kalshi has raised more than $1 billion in a new funding round at a $22 billion valuation, roughly doubling from about $11 billion in December 2025; the round was led by Coatue Management, and the company’s annualized revenue stands at approximately $1.5 billion. Despite regulatory pressure, including accusations by the Arizona attorney general of operating an “illegal gambling” business, investor demand for exposure to the prediction market sector remains intact. x.com/business/statu…









I'm speechless. I started from $3,000 last October on @Polymarket, and as of now I have officially 10x my investment: Over $30,000 in my balance. This is the first week I've earned over $1k per day. Absolutely insane. Very thankful for everything <3 See y'all at $50k!







146,960 markets and the consistent finding is that YES gets overpriced across the board means the crowd likes interesting outcomes and is willing to pay a fun premium Odds at 50% being the most mispriced makes sense too , weak conviction and more relience of narrative which will keep developing. people don't buy YES because they calculated 55%. they buy YES because they can picture it happening. so there is an avaliability bias (the imagining outcome happening is avaliable) thx for the insights!

