BEIJING– Imagine logging onto a website and placing a real-money bet on the survival of China’s top political leaders. You are not betting on a football game. You are not betting on an election. Instead, you are wagering on the secretive, high-stakes world of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
Welcome to the new era of geopolitical forecasting. On Polymarket , the world’s largest decentralized prediction market, bettors from around the globe are putting millions of dollars on the line to guess the future of Chinese politics. Right now, two massive questions are dominating the platform: Will President Xi Jinping lose power before 2027? And which senior CCP official will be the next to face a ruthless political purge?
Currently, the man leading the odds for the next political downfall is China’s Defense Minister, Dong Jun.
Over the past few weeks, Dong has mysteriously vanished from high-profile international events. His disappearance has sent shockwaves through the global intelligence community. It has also triggered a massive influx of bets from amateur analysts and financial traders alike.
In this article, we will look at the rise of these political betting markets, the strange and sudden disappearance of Dong Jun, and why global observers are starting to view climbing the ranks in Beijing as a dangerous, life-or-death survival game. What does all of this tell us about Xi Jinping’s grip on power? And more importantly, what does it reveal about the future of China?
The Rise of Geopolitical Betting on Polymarket
To understand why people are betting on Chinese politics, you first need to understand how prediction markets work.
Polymarket is a decentralized platform where users buy and sell shares based on the outcomes of future events. If you guess right, you make money. If you guess wrong, you lose your investment. For years, prediction markets focused mainly on simple binary events. People bet on who would win the Super Bowl, who would win the U.S. presidential election, or whether the Federal Reserve would raise interest rates.
But recently, the platform has expanded into the murky waters of global geopolitics.
Why is this happening? Because prediction markets are incredibly effective at gathering information. When people have “skin in the game,” they tend to research deeply and think critically. In the world of finance, this is known as the “wisdom of the crowd.”
When it comes to the Chinese Communist Party, information is notoriously difficult to find. The CCP operates like a black box. There is no free press, no public debates, and no transparent legal system for political leaders. Official state media only releases information after decisions have already been made behind closed doors.
Because official information is so scarce, global observers, intelligence analysts, and financial traders are turning to platforms like Polymarket to gauge market sentiment. It is a real-time tracker of political stability. Right now, the markets are flashing warning signs about the inner workings of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and the stability of Xi Jinping’s inner circle.
The Two Big Bets
Currently, there are two major China-focused markets drawing attention:
- Will Xi Jinping lose power before 2027?This market asks a simple question about the ultimate leader. As of early June 2026, the odds of him losing power are sitting at roughly 8%. While this number seems low, the fact that millions of dollars are actively traded on this possibility shows that the global market does not view his rule as entirely bulletproof.
- Who will Xi Jinping purge in 2026?This is a multiple-choice market. Bettors can wager on several top Chinese officials. Right now, Defense Minister Dong Jun is the overwhelming favorite to be purged next, with his odds hovering between 12% and 20%.
Why are bettors so confident that Dong Jun is about to fall? The answer lies in his recent, unexplained absence from the world stage.
The Mysterious Case of Dong Jun
To understand why the prediction markets are betting against Dong Jun, we have to look at the events of late May 2026.
Every year, defense ministers and military leaders from around the world gather in Singapore for the Shangri-La Dialogue . It is Asia’s premier defense and security forum. It is a critical event where rival nations, particularly the United States and China, can speak face-to-face to manage tensions and prevent accidental wars.
This year, the U.S. sent its Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, fresh off a diplomatic trip to Beijing with President Donald Trump. Hegseth arrived in Singapore ready to engage with his Chinese counterpart.
But China’s defense minister never showed up.
Instead of sending Dong Jun, Beijing dispatched a low-profile delegation of “experts and scholars” from military academies. For the second year in a row, the Chinese defense minister skipped the most important security forum in the region.
During his keynote speech, Hegseth explicitly noted the absence, stating, “I wish my counterpart was here at this conference.” Other global leaders, including Australia’s defense minister, called it a massive lost opportunity for direct communication.
So, where is Dong Jun?
The Chinese government has offered no official explanation for his absence. The Ministry of Defense has remained completely silent. For seasoned China watchers, this kind of silence usually means one thing: the official is under investigation.
A Troubled Tenure
Dong Jun’s rise to power was historic, but his tenure has been rocky from the start.
Appointed in December 2023, he was the first defense minister in China’s history to come from the People’s Liberation Army Navy. His appointment was initially seen as a signal that China was prioritizing its naval power, particularly regarding Taiwan and the South China Sea.
However, Dong was never given the traditional political titles that go along with the job. In China, the defense minister usually sits on the powerful Central Military Commission (CMC) and holds the title of State Councilor. Dong was denied both of these positions. This led analysts to suspect that Xi Jinping never fully trusted him.
By late 2024, rumors began to swirl that Dong was under investigation for corruption. While the Chinese Foreign Ministry dismissed these reports at the time as “shadow-chasing,” his sudden disappearance in May 2026 has reignited the fire. On Polymarket, bettors are acting on the assumption that Dong has secretly been detained.
A History of Vanishing Generals
If Dong Jun has indeed been purged, he is simply the latest victim in what has become a brutal, endless cycle of military crackdowns under Xi Jinping.
To call the position of Chinese Defense Minister a “poisoned chalice” would be an understatement. The job has become one of the most dangerous positions in global politics. If you look at the recent history of the role, the pattern is undeniable:
- Wei Fenghe (Defense Minister from 2018 to 2023):Wei suddenly disappeared from public view in 2023. In May 2026, he was handed a suspended death sentence for severe corruption and bribery.
- Li Shangfu (Defense Minister in 2023):Li lasted only seven months in the job before he vanished in August 2023. Like his predecessor, he was formally expelled from the Communist Party and given a suspended death sentence in May 2026.
- Dong Jun (Appointed December 2023):Now missing from public events in mid-2026, with prediction markets heavily betting on his impending downfall.
But the purges go far beyond the defense ministers. Over the last three years, Xi Jinping has launched an unprecedented crackdown on the highest levels of the military.
In 2023, Xi completely gutted the leadership of the PLA Rocket Force, the elite branch responsible for China’s nuclear arsenal and conventional missiles. Top commanders were fired without explanation, and state-owned defense industry executives were removed from the national legislature.
The purges continued into early 2026. According to reports and analyses , the crackdown reached the absolute peak of the military establishment. General Zhang Youxia, the powerful vice-chairman of the Central Military Commission and a childhood friend of Xi Jinping, was placed under investigation. General Liu Zhenli, the chief of staff, was also targeted.
These moves have functionally reduced the Central Military Commission—the supreme command of the Chinese military—from seven members down to just two: Xi Jinping himself, and his anti-corruption enforcer.
Why Is Xi Purging His Own Military?
When global observers see a leader constantly firing and arresting his top generals, they often assume the regime is unstable. But is that really the case in China?
Experts are divided on what is driving Xi Jinping’s endless military purges. However, most agree that it comes down to three main factors:
1. Rooting Out Endemic Corruption
The Chinese military has a long history of institutional corruption. For decades, military ranks were bought and sold, and massive defense contracts were awarded based on kickbacks. When Xi came to power in 2012, he vowed to clean this up.
However, the recent discovery of severe corruption within the Rocket Force—including reports of missiles filled with water instead of fuel, and missile silos with defective lids—reportedly infuriated Xi. He realized that the military he relies on to project global power was rotting from the inside.
2. Demanding Absolute Loyalty
In the CCP, loyalty to the party is important, but loyalty to Xi Jinping is paramount. The official charges against many of these fallen generals are not just about money. The military newspaper has accused purged leaders of “trampling on the CMC Chairman Responsibility System.”
In plain English, this means they failed to follow Xi’s orders perfectly. Xi is restructuring the military to ensure that no general can build an independent power base or question his authority.
3. Preparation for Conflict
The CCP has a stated goal of building a “world-class military” by the middle of the century, with a critical modernization deadline set for 2027. This happens to coincide with the timeline many Western intelligence agencies believe China wants to be ready to invade Taiwan.
Xi cannot launch a highly complex, multi-domain war if his generals are taking bribes or if his equipment is faulty. According to analysts at Merics , the purges are a ruthless attempt to forge an operational, combat-ready military that will not fail him when the time comes.
The 2027 Question: Will Xi Jinping Lose Power?
This brings us back to the other major question on Polymarket: Will Xi Jinping lose power before 2027?
The year 2027 is incredibly significant in Chinese politics. It marks the 100th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Liberation Army. It is also the year Xi Jinping will seek to secure his fourth term in power at the 21st Party Congress. Furthermore, it is the year U.S. intelligence has historically cited as Xi’s deadline for his military to be capable of taking Taiwan by force.
Bettors on Polymarket currently give Xi a 92% chance of staying in power through 2027. This reflects the reality on the ground: Xi has systematically eliminated all political rivals, dismantled opposing factions, and surrounded himself with absolute loyalists.
However, the 8% chance of him falling is not zero. It represents the institutional risks of his own behavior.
By centralizing all power into his own hands, Xi has created a fragile system. If something goes wrong—a severe economic collapse, a military failure, or a sudden health crisis—there is no succession plan and no institutional safety net.
Furthermore, governing by perpetual fear carries risks. When generals are constantly looking over their shoulders, terrified of being purged or executed, they become paralyzed. They hide bad news from the top. They refuse to make bold decisions. In a crisis, a military paralyzed by fear of its own leader is highly prone to miscalculation.
CCP Politics: A High-Stakes Survival Game
What we are witnessing today is a profound shift in how the world views the Chinese government.
For decades, the West viewed the Chinese Communist Party as a ruthless but highly competent and stable technocracy. Leaders served their terms, power was transferred peacefully, and the economy grew.
Today, under Xi Jinping, that system has been replaced by a system of absolute personal rule. Climbing the ranks of the CCP is no longer just a path to wealth and prestige; it is a high-stakes survival game.
To the bettors on Polymarket, the CCP operates like a high-stakes reality show. They watch the news, track the disappearances, and place their wagers on who will be voted off the island next.
But to the officials actually living in Beijing, the stakes are terrifyingly real. A misstep does not just mean losing your job. As the recent death sentences of Wei Fenghe and Li Shangfu prove, a misstep means spending the rest of your life in a concrete cell, or worse.
The Global Consequences
This internal drama is not just a domestic issue for China. It impacts the entire world.
When China’s defense minister suddenly vanishes, the U.S. loses a vital point of contact. During the Shangri-La Dialogue in May 2026, the lack of a high-level Chinese representative meant that crucial discussions about the South China Sea, Taiwan, and global security simply could not happen.
When lines of communication break down, the risk of an accidental war skyrockets.
If Defense Minister Dong Jun has truly fallen, the world will wait to see who Xi Jinping appoints next. But whoever takes the job will do so knowing that their two immediate predecessors are sitting on death row. They will know that speaking out of turn, failing to show adequate loyalty, or even just attending a diplomatic meeting with the wrong foreign official could end their life.
For now, the global markets continue to watch, wait, and bet on the outcome. The odds are shifting every day. But in the ultimate gamble of Chinese politics, there is only one man who truly controls the board, and his name is Xi Jinping.

















