Polymarket CEO takes a victory lap after prediction market correctly calls 26/28 Golden Globe winners
Kevin Winter/GA/The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images
- Polymarket partnered with the Golden Globes, showing viewers betting odds for each award category.
- Ultimately, Polymarket bettors guessed correctly 26 out of 28 times.
- CEO Shayne Coplan took a victory lap on X: "A surreal moment and a highlight for all our team members' moms."
The Golden Globes is the latest example of prediction markets correctly calling the outcome of a major event.
Polymarket CEO Shayne Coplan took a victory lap on X following the platform's partnership with the Golden Globe Awards over the weekend, in which viewers were able to see the betting odds for each category throughout the show.
"Polymarket called 26/28 winners right," Coplan wrote on X.
On Polymarket, users can buy and sell shares on the outcomes of various future events, including elections, sports, and more. That included the winners of the 28 different award categories at the Golden Globes.
Coplan called the Golden Globes partnership "the single most mainstream prediction market integration to date," and "a surreal moment and a highlight for all our team members' moms."
The Golden Globes integrated Polymarket into their broadcast last night.
— Shayne Coplan ???? (@shayne_coplan) January 12, 2026
The single most mainstream prediction market integration to date.
Polymarket called 26/28 winners right ????
We have a long way to go to educate the public on the value of market-based forecasts, but you… pic.twitter.com/N12CP2E6SD
Ultimately, bettors correctly predicted the winner in 26 out of the 28 categories.
Not everyone was thrilled with the partnership, though. Several posts on X criticizing the integration drew significant engagement.
“The Golden Globes Best Podcast odds presented by Polymarket” is a new low for this humiliating awards show pic.twitter.com/aGs0av9GfF
— Josh Billinson (@jbillinson) January 12, 2026
the golden globes incorporating polymarket betting ON SCREEN in genuinely disgusting and we need to push back on these pocket casinos at every opportunity
— matt (@mattxiv) January 12, 2026
Coplan seemed to allude to some of the backlash in his post on X.
"We have a long way to go to educate the public on the value of market-based forecasts, but you can't deny its accuracy," Coplan wrote. "People have more clarity about the world because Polymarket exists."
Polymarket, and prediction markets generally, have been under more scrutiny in recent weeks following a suspicious and well-timed Venezuela-related trade on the platform.
An anonymous users bet $30,000 that Maduro would be out as the country's leaders just hours before he was captured. The user ultimately netted over $400,000.
That transaction has fueled concerns about insider trading, leading a congressman to introduce a bill to bar lawmakers and other government officials from insider trading on prediction markets.