Uni drop-out is world’s youngest self-made billionaire after $3b Wall Street deal

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Uni drop-out is world’s youngest self-made billionaire after $3b Wall Street deal

By Tom Maloney

October 9, 2025 — 10.01am

A couple of years after dropping out of New York University with dreams of making it big in crypto, Shayne Coplan was so broke that he took an inventory of his Lower East Side apartment so that he could sell belongings to make rent.

Fed up with crypto grifts, in 2019 he started to explore economist Robin Hanson’s ideas on prediction markets and their potential for improving society’s ability to identify likely outcomes.

“This is too good of an idea to just exist in white papers,” he recalled thinking in a later post on X. Then COVID-19 struck - the perfect time to develop an app for stuck-at-home folks to bet on real-world outcomes, he reasoned.

At 27, Shayne Coplan has become the world’s youngest self-made billionaire.

At 27, Shayne Coplan has become the world’s youngest self-made billionaire.Credit: Bloomberg

He began building Polymarket from his bathroom and launched the platform in June 2020.

It wasn’t a smooth road. The company’s move-fast, ask-permission-later approach repeatedly ran afoul of regulators, who forced it to ban US-based users for years because it wasn’t a registered exchange. A week after the 2024 presidential election — one that Polymarket users wagered more than $US3 billion on — Coplan’s apartment was raided by FBI agents.

But he and his company are now riding high after Intercontinental Exchange, the owner of the New York Stock Exchange, said it would invest as much as $US2 billion ($3 billion) in Polymarket at an $US8 billion pre-money valuation. That deal makes its 27-year-old founder the youngest self-made billionaire tracked by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

A spokesperson for Polymarket declined to comment.

Prediction markets like Polymarket allow users to bet on the outcomes of various events, like elections, whether the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates, who will win the Nobel Peace Prize, how well Taylor Swift’s album “Life of a Showgirl” will sell, or who Time magazine’s person of the year will be.

They are also becoming increasingly popular as a venue for wagering on sports. Because US prediction markets are regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, their proponents argue they sell financial products tied to the outcome of sporting events rather than sports bets, allowing them to skirt state-level bans on sports gambling. They’ve also been able to avoid certain US federal and state taxes applied to sports-wagering revenue.

In August, rival Kalshi began offering prediction-market bets through a partnership with Robinhood Markets. The electronic brokerage reported that more than 2 billion prediction contracts had traded in the third quarter.

Gaming stocks Caesars Entertainment and DraftKings both fell more than 5 per cent on Tuesday after the Polymarket deal was announced.

Legal jeopardy

Polymarket suffered a major setback in 2022, when it paid a $US1.4 million penalty to settle with the CFTC over allegations it was offering illegal trading. Without admitting or denying wrongdoing, the company agreed to block US-based users going forward.

But regulators suspected that Polymarket continued to host US users on the site, and in November, a week after Election Day, FBI agents raided Coplan’s home before dawn and seized electronic devices. The company called the move “obvious political retribution.”

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The Justice Department and CFTC dropped their investigations in July. That same month, Polymarket acquired CFTC-licensed exchange and clearinghouse QCEX for $US112 million, allowing it to resume US operations legally.

The company raised at least $US255 million before ICE’s investment, according to data tracked by Pitchbook. Investors include Peter Thiel and his Founders Fund, Ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin and investment firm Blockchain Capital.

Another notable backer is 1789 Capital, which invested in Polymarket before the 2024 election and again this year. As part of that deal, Donald Trump Jr, President Donald Trump’s son and a partner at 1789, joined the company as an adviser in August. He also advises Kalshi.

The company’s ties to Washington could deepen even further with the ICE investment. ICE’s CEO, Jeffrey Sprecher, is married to Kelly Loeffler, a former senator who is a member of Trump’s cabinet.

Looking at his bathroom app’s rise into a $US8 billion enterprise, Coplan said the past two years had been surreal.

“Going from a write-off to creating a category, watching our vision become a reality,” he posted on X. “If I learned one thing, it’s that bold ideas are everywhere, hidden in plain sight. It just takes someone crazy enough to spend their life willing it into existence. That’s entrepreneurship: willing things into existence.”

Bloomberg

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