If you’ve spent any time on Polymarket, you’ve seen them. The wallets with inhuman reflexes. The ones that seem to front-run news by milliseconds, arbing priceIf you’ve spent any time on Polymarket, you’ve seen them. The wallets with inhuman reflexes. The ones that seem to front-run news by milliseconds, arbing price

Why You Will Never Copy-Trade a Polymarket HFT Bot

2026/04/05 15:19
5 min read
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If you’ve spent any time on Polymarket, you’ve seen them. The wallets with inhuman reflexes. The ones that seem to front-run news by milliseconds, arbing price discrepancies before you can even refresh the page.

The temptation is obvious: “If I can see their trades on-chain, why don’t I just spin up a bot to copy-trade them?”

It’s the holy grail of low-effort DeFi: identify a winning whale and draft off their success. On a standard DEX like Uniswap, this is sometimes possible.

But on Polymarket, it is mathematically impossible.

If you try to copy-trade a true High-Frequency Trading (HFT) market maker on Polymarket based on on-chain data, you will be slaughtered.

Here is the technical breakdown of why, based on Polymarket’s own architecture and documentation.

1. Hybrid architecture

The biggest mistake beginners make is assuming Polymarket works like Uniswap.

Uniswap is an Automated Market Maker (AMM). Everything happens on-chain. When you provide liquidity, your resting orders are visible in the smart contract state. When you swap, it’s one transaction. It’s slow, expensive, but entirely transparent.

Polymarket is different. It uses a Hybrid Central Limit Order Book (CLOB).

This architecture is split into two distinct worlds:

  • The Off-Chain Engine: Where orders are placed, managed, and matched.
  • The On-Chain Settlement: Where the final trade is recorded on Polygon.

This split is the key to HFT dominance, and the reason you can’t copy them.

2. Off-Chain Orders

HFT bots don’t just make trades; they provide liquidity. Their “secret sauce” isn’t the trade that just happened; it’s the thousands of orders they currently have sitting in the order book that haven’t been filled yet.

On Polymarket, this “resting liquidity” lives entirely off-chain on Polymarket’s servers.

When an HFT bot places an order, they are taking a cryptographic action (signing an EIP-712 message) that says, “I am willing to buy YES at $0.45.” This message is sent to the off-chain matching engine. Crucially, this action does not touch the blockchain. There is no gas fee, no block confirmation time, and most importantly, no public record.

If you look at the Polymarket API documentation for the public order book (GET /book), the data is anonymized by design.

You will see:

Bid: $0.45 | Size: $10,000 Ask: $0.46 | Size: $15,000

You will NOT see:

Bid: $0.45 | Size: $10,000 | Maker: 0xWhaleBot…

The documentation confirms this: to see open orders with attribution, you must use authenticated API endpoints that require private API keys and signatures. You can only see your open orders.

The HFT’s entire strategy, their “map” of the market, is invisible to you.

3. Why “Reactive Copying” Fails

“Okay,” you might say. “I can’t see their resting orders. But once a trade hits the blockchain, it’s public! I’ll just use the Websocket API to watch for fills from the whale address and copy instantly!

This is called reactive copying, and against an HFT, it is FINANCIAL SUICIDE.

By the time a trade is matched off-chain, submitted to the Polygon blockchain, included in a block, and emitted as an event that your bot picks up, you are already eternity late in HFT time.

Here is a scenario of why copying filled trades fails:

The Setup: A piece of news breaks.

  • T+1ms (Off-Chain): The HFT bot instantly detects the news and cancels 500 resting “sell” orders and aggressively places new “buy” orders. You see none of this.
  • T+10ms (Off-Chain): A counterparty hits one of the HFT’s new buy orders. The match is made.
  • T+2 seconds (On-Chain): The trade settles on Polygon. You finally see on-chain that 0xWhaleBot bought YES at $0.50.
  • T+2.1 seconds (Your move): Your copy bot sees the trade and tries to buy YES.

The Result: By the time your order hits the book, the HFT has already readjusted its entire inventory. The price is now $0.55. You either get filled at a terrible price (massive slippage) or you don’t get filled at all.

You are reacting to a ghost. You are seeing where the puck was, not where it is going.

Conclusion

Think of Polymarket like a high-stakes poker game.

  • HFT Bots: Players who can rearrange their hand and place bets thousands of times per second without showing anyone their cards.
  • On-Chain The moment two players finally show their cards at the end of a hand.

Trying to copy-trade HFTs using on-chain data is like deciding how to bet based on the cards someone showed in the previous hand.

The real game happens in the off-chain darkness. The winners there are defined by speed, infrastructure, and proprietary algorithms — not by who they are copying.

If your goal is to extract serious profit from Polymarket’s order book, you have to abandon the dream of riding on a whale’s coattails. The platform’s hybrid architecture physically and mathematically prevents it. Because you cannot copy their algorithm, your only viable path forward is to build and run your own. Stop trying to react to the ghosts of their past trades, and start writing the code to become the player setting the pace in the dark.

Or you can join the incredible community of Arbigab to start using a battle tested trading system!


Why You Will Never Copy-Trade a Polymarket HFT Bot was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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