WASHINGTON (Worthy Satire) – The prediction market Polymarket unveiled its latest viral wager this week: Will the CEO of McDonald’s get sick after eating the company’s new “Arch Burger”?
Within hours, thousands of traders piled into the market, turning what was intended as a lighthearted promotional stunt into a full-blown financial conspiracy theory.
The controversy began after McDonald’s executives publicly celebrated the launch of the Arch Burger — a towering sandwich reportedly containing two patties, three sauces, caramelized onions, and what insiders describe as “an ambitious amount of cheese.”
To prove confidence in the product, the company’s CEO announced he would personally eat one live during a media event.
That’s when Polymarket users saw an opportunity.
Speculators quickly created a market allowing traders to bet on whether the CEO would experience “gastrointestinal regret within 24 hours.”
Within minutes, a theory emerged that the entire stunt might actually be a sophisticated Wall Street maneuver.
“If he eats the burger and gets sick, the stock dips,” wrote one trader on the platform. “But what if he already shorted McDonald’s?”
The theory snowballed.
Some traders now believe the CEO secretly purchased shares of Burger King — McDonald’s longtime rival — before taking the bite.
“If he tanks his own stock and Burger King rises from the chaos, that’s a legendary trade,” one user wrote.
Financial analysts attempted to calm the speculation.
“Corporate executives intentionally poisoning themselves to manipulate equities would be extremely illegal,” said one market strategist.
“Extremely illegal,” he repeated, pausing. “But also… extremely funny.”
Meanwhile, Polymarket traders have already created several spin-off bets, including:
Will the CEO ask for a glass of milk halfway through the burger
Will a McDonald’s doctor appear on stage “just in case”
Whether Burger King posts a congratulatory tweet
At press time, the odds that the CEO finishes the entire Arch Burger without incident were trading at 38%, while a competing market asking if he would quietly spit it into a napkin was surging rapidly.
A spokesperson for McDonald’s attempted to reassure the public.
“The Arch Burger is completely safe,” the statement read. “Also, our CEO definitely did not buy Burger King stock.”
Traders immediately interpreted the denial as bullish for Burger King.
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