A single news event almost never moves just one market - it knocks over a row of dominoes. This guide is about trading that chain: how to build a thesis from a headline, map the consequences across correlated markets, take the leg you are most sure of, and hedge the rest. With a worked geopolitics example and an honest look at where the edge really is.

The big idea: events come in chains

Beginners trade one market at a time: will this happen, yes or no. The traders who do well with news think one step further - they ask what else moves if it happens. A central-bank decision does not just settle a rate market; it nudges inflation markets, election markets, even crypto. An election outcome shifts the odds on the policies that candidate would bring. Once you start seeing these links, a single headline becomes a handful of related trades, and your job is to find the one the crowd has not priced yet.

That is event-driven trading in one sentence: trade the consequences, not just the event. Here is how to do it without fooling yourself.

  • Build a thesis from a headline
  • Map the domino chain across markets
  • Take the leg you are surest of - and hedge the rest
  • A worked geopolitics example
  • The honest risks (including who you might be trading against)

Step 1: Build the thesis

Start with a clear, falsifiable claim, not a vibe. "Things feel tense" is not a thesis. "I think the market is underpricing the chance of a ceasefire being signed this month, because the last three rounds of talks each moved the needle and the latest one just did too" is a thesis - it names what you believe, why, and what would prove you wrong.

The best theses come from a domain you actually follow, where your read is genuinely better than the average trader's. If you cannot say in one sentence why you know something the crowd does not, you probably do not, and you are just guessing with extra steps.

Step 2: Map the domino chain

Now ask the second-order question: if I am right, what moves? Write the chain out plainly. One event makes a second thing more likely, which changes the price of a third. Most of these links are loose tendencies, not laws - so mark each one as strong, medium, or weak. You are looking for a link that is reasonably strong and where the market has not caught up, because that gap is where the money is. The obvious first domino is usually already priced; the edge is two or three steps down the chain, where fewer people have done the work.

A worked example: a Middle East escalation

Suppose you think the odds of a US or Israeli strike on Iran are higher than the market implies. Do not stop at that one market - map the chain.

If escalation happens...Likely moveLink strength
Oil and goldUp (supply shock, safe-haven demand)Strong
Bitcoin and equitiesDown, at least short term (risk-off)Medium
A near-term peace-deal marketDown (escalation pushes peace away)Strong

So instead of one bet, you have options. You might take the leg you are surest of - say, fading a near-term peace-deal market - rather than the noisy "will BTC drop" leg. And you size it for a chain that is only partly reliable, not a certainty. For context, these are not thin markets: Polymarket's war-and-conflict markets have traded tens of millions of dollars in a single day, so there is real liquidity to work with - and, as we will see, real sharks too.

Step 3: Hedge the parts you are unsure about

Hedging is simply taking a second, offsetting position so a single surprise cannot wreck you. The point is not to remove all risk - that removes all profit too - but to cap the damage from the thing you are least sure of.

Example. Say you are holding a risk-on position elsewhere that would suffer if the Middle East flares up. A small position that profits from escalation acts as insurance: if the flare-up happens, your main trade hurts but the hedge pays, and you live to trade another day. This is exactly how businesses use prediction markets too - a company exposed to new tariffs might buy YES on "tariffs imposed on sector X" so that a bad policy outcome is partly paid for by the trade. A good hedge is genuinely correlated to the risk and cheap enough that it does not eat your whole edge.

For more on building portfolios of related positions, see our advanced multi-market strategies and the cross-market price gaps in statistical arbitrage.

The honest risks

  • The obvious trade is already priced. By the time a headline reaches you, fast traders and bots have usually moved the first domino. Your edge has to be earlier or deeper in the chain.
  • Correlations break. "Risk-off means Bitcoin drops" is a tendency, not a rule - sometimes it rises on the same news. Mark your links honestly and never bet the chain as a sure thing.
  • You may be trading against insiders. Geopolitical markets in particular can attract people who genuinely know more - reporting on Polymarket's Iran-conflict markets has raised exactly this concern. If a price moves hard for no public reason, assume someone knows something you do not.
  • Resolution is everything. Event markets live or die on their exact wording. Read the resolution criteria before you trade a thesis - see how markets resolve.

Can you automate it?

Partly. The reaction speed - catching a headline and moving before the crowd - is a job for code, and that is the subject of the news-arbitrage bot guide. But the thesis itself, the judgment about which dominoes will actually fall, is still human work. The best setups pair a fast bot for execution with a person who genuinely understands the story. For the broader geopolitical context and which markets move together, see geopolitics trading.

Key takeaways

  • Trade the chain, not just the event - one headline moves a row of correlated markets.
  • Build a falsifiable thesis from a domain you actually follow; if you cannot say why you know something the crowd does not, you do not.
  • Take the leg you are surest of, and hedge the noisy parts so one surprise cannot wreck you.
  • The edge is early or deep in the chain - the first domino is already priced.
  • Mind the sharks: geopolitical markets can carry information asymmetry. Size for a chain that is noisy, never certain.

Frequently asked questions

What is event-driven trading on Polymarket?
It means trading the consequences of a real-world event rather than a single market in isolation. A big event rarely moves just one market - it sets off a chain. An escalation in the Middle East, for example, tends to push oil and gold markets up and risk assets like Bitcoin down, at least short term. Event-driven trading is the craft of mapping that chain, taking the leg you have the clearest read on, and hedging the parts you are unsure about.
How do you hedge a Polymarket position?
You take an offsetting position in a correlated market so that if your main trade goes wrong, the hedge softens the loss. For instance, if you are long a risk-on outcome, a position that profits from geopolitical escalation can cushion the blow if escalation actually happens. The art is finding a hedge that is genuinely correlated and cheap enough that it does not eat your whole edge.
Is event-driven trading profitable on Polymarket?
It can be, for people who genuinely follow the news and think in second-order effects - but the obvious trade is usually already priced in by the time you see the headline. The edge is in being early, in spotting a domino the crowd has not connected yet, or in correctly judging that a fear is overdone. It is the highest-ceiling approach and one of the hardest, and it carries an information-asymmetry risk: in fast-moving geopolitical markets you are sometimes trading against people who know more than you do.
What is a domino or chain trade?
A domino trade follows the knock-on effects of one event through several markets. If event A happens, it makes B more likely, which changes the odds on C. You build a small thesis about that chain and position in the link where your conviction is highest and the price has not caught up yet. The rule is never to size it as if the whole chain is certain, because these correlations are real but noisy and often break.