Blockchain Analysts Flag Potential Insider Trading in US-Iran Conflict Bets

by Dimitri Dimitrov Published on March 2, 2026
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Financial charts on a screen with a person pointing at a specific upward trend in a dark, high-tech trading environment and the Bubblemaps analysis.

As global markets reacted in real-time to recent U.S. military strikes against Iran, blockchain analytics firm Bubblemaps has identified a cluster of six pseudonymous wallets that appeared to have “foresight” of the event.

These accounts collectively earned over $1.2 million by betting on the exact date of the kinetic military action via the decentralized prediction platform Polymarket.

The “Ahead of the Curve” Pattern

According to Bubblemaps, the trading behavior was marked by several unusual elements that suggest more than mere market sentiment. All six wallets were created in February, funded shortly before placing their bets, and exclusively purchased “Yes” contracts for a February 28 strike date, just hours before the event occurred.

While the contract had been active since December, the sudden clustering of high-conviction trades from brand-new accounts has raised inevitable questions about the source of the information.

OSINT vs. Privileged Information

Currently, no public evidence proves illegal insider trading. In the modern era, sophisticated traders often monitor Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT), tracking naval positioning, satellite imagery, and diplomatic signals that move faster than traditional news cycles.

However, the timing of these specific trades, placed as military assets were moving into position, has placed the industry under a regulatory microscope. This incident follows recent scrutiny of platforms like Kalshi, which took action against users suspected of leveraging non-public information.

The Ethical Frontier of War Betting

Beyond the legality of the trades lies a deeper conversation regarding the morality of event-based betting on human conflict. If military escalation becomes a tradeable asset class, the industry must confront the boundaries of its products.

“Liquidity does not eliminate moral complexity,” the report suggests. “As geopolitical markets grow, regulators may ask whether profit tied directly to violence deserves equal treatment to other information markets.”

*Source: iGaming Today

Dimitri Dimitrov

Dimitri is an iGaming expert with nearly a decade of experience and a knack for crafting content that speaks directly to the iGaming crowd. He understands affiliate marketing, player psychology, and search algorithms, which enables him to write engaging, data-driven articles.

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