In the early 20th century, for brief periods, the most frenetic American trading pits were not the raucous markets in which stocks were traded, nor the venues where bonds were exchanged. The real action was in the market for betting on the next president. “Crowds formed in the financial district…and brokers would call out bid and ask odds as if trading securities,” write Paul Rhode and Koleman Strumpf, two economists. Markets were deep, liquid and smart: in 15 presidential elections from 1884 to 1940, the favourite won 11 times and three races were essentially tied (in odds and result). Only once did markets miss the mark.
Betting markets are useful when politics is chaotic

Related Posts

Passenger vehicle dispatches decline 9% to 3,21,840 units in August: SIAM
September 15, 2025
10:11 pm

Sixth tranche of auction for critical and strategic minerals to be launched on Tuesday
September 15, 2025
4:10 pm

Nirmala Sitharaman says regulations should foster technology innovations, not wipe them out
September 15, 2025
10:09 am