This market is an experiment in allowing "investments" in the portfolios of other Manifold users.
From Oct 15 to Nov 15 (GMT), the value of @jack's portfolio went from M$108,000 to $165,450, an increase of 53%. This was not an outlier: the value of @jack's portfolio was M$11,380 on July 15, M$26,400 on Aug 15 (+132.0%), M$33,700 on Sept 15 (+27.6%), and had +220.5% growth to October. The average of these monthly growth rates is 108%. There is reason to believe that the rate of growth is going to be lower in December (fewer high-value markets resolving, surviving counterparties being more sophisticated ), but @jack may surprise.
This market resolves YES if the value of @jack's portfolio has more than doubled on Dec 15. More precisely, if the value of @jack's portfolio is greater than M$330,900 at 00:00:00 GMT on Dec 15, then this market will resolve "YES".
@IsaacKing Figured you were doing some type of scheme. Well, that's fine, the way I see it I just spent $5 to raise $500 for charity. I consider this an absolute win.
@ForrestTaylor Can someone explain exactly what the manipulation was? I don't even know how to send mana to other people...
@WilliamHoward You can send mana to other people with Manalinks https://manifold.markets/links (it's not a super well known feature, it's under labs)
The manipulation was simply sending me enough mana to get above the 330k threshold (and then I returned it after).
This is why I suggested profit would be a better metric, although beware that profit can also be manipulated (not quite as easily, but still pretty easy).
@WilliamHoward Unfortunately it's hard to find the way to send mana from the main page. You have to click the "more" button in the sidebar, then "labs", and then select "manalinks". Or use the direct URL that Jack provided.
@ForrestTaylor Just so you know, market manipulation is very common on Manifold. Any time a market's resolution criteria are easy to manipulate, you should expect it to likely happen.
@IsaacKing Can you explain to me what "goodhartable" means? Google isn't providing me with an obvious answer and I don't want to bug ChatGPT about it
@ForrestTaylor Oh, sorry, it's a reference to Goodhart's Law.