By Daniel Trotta
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The online prediction market Intrade
sees a 14.6 percent chance Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin will be
withdrawn as the Republican vice presidential nominee before
the U.S. presidential election on November 4.
Intrade accepts trades on the probability of events such as
whether there will be a recession, whether the U.S. Congress
will lift the ban on offshore drilling or whether the United
States or Israel will launch a military strike on Iran.
It opened the Palin betting market on Tuesday morning after
a series of revelations about the Alaska governor, whom Sen.
John McCain chose as his running mate, including that her
unmarried 17-year-old daughter was pregnant.
The market opened at 3 percent that she would have to
withdraw from the race and rose to a high of 18.9 percent. It
fell back to 14.6 percent on 2,729 trades as of 9:52 p.m. EDT
(9:52 p.m. EDT) after the Republican Party convention opened in
St. Paul, Minnesota.
The markets are priced from zero to 100, with zero meaning
investors see no chance an event will happen and 100 meaning it
already has happened.
Removal of a vice presidential candidate from the ticket is
very rare. The last time it happened came in 1972 when Democrat
George McGovern dropped Missouri Sen. Thomas Eagleton after it
was revealed he had been hospitalized three times for "nervous
exhaustion" and received electric shock treatments.
Intrade Chief Executive John Delaney, based in Ireland,
said he had no reservations about starting the Palin market.
"(Was it) a political decision for us? No. We list markets
that are relevant to people, that people have a passionate
interest in getting a greater amount of certainty about,"
Delaney said in a telephone interview.
He called prediction markets more accurate than public
opinion polls and said Intrade forecast President George W.
Bush's reelection in 2004 while correctly indicating the
results in all 50 states.
The market gives Democratic U.S. Sen. Barack Obama a 61.6
percent chance of a November win, with McCain at 38.6 percent.
(Additional reporting by Andy Sullivan; Editing by David
Wiessler)