Roy works a 9-5 in accounting.
He wakes up at 8:00 every morning, makes pancakes for his kids, kisses his wife goodbye, and clocks in.
He has not accounted for his whole life depending on that job still being there tomorrow.
Here's what can go wrong:
A war breaks out. The economy tanks. Companies cut costs. Roy gets laid off.
AI gets good enough at spreadsheets or his 70yr old boss discovers Claude Cowork. Roy's out.
His company has a bad quarter. There's no more room for Roy.
Roy has no control over any of these risks. But they all control his income and his life.
He knows this. He just doesn't think there's anything he can do about it.
But what if you could bet on what happens in your life before it happens?
Your job. Your industry. Your specific employment situation. And use those bets as a safety net.
That’s what we are building at Offset.
Here's how it works:
Roy inputs his job title, company, industry, and tenure.
We map the risks that threaten him most (i.e., AI automation, macro recession, sector-wide layoffs).
Then we find the prediction markets that move when those risks hit. Interest rates. Unemployment. War declarations. Legislation. Macro indicators. AI model ratings.
Roy's risk now has a price tag on it.
Then we model what his life looks like across every future. The "everything is fine" world. The "Roy gets a Slack message from HR" world. And every world in between.
Then we build the hedge.
Goal: cut Roy's downside. Keep costs low. Make the worst outcomes survivable.
For context, Roy makes $60k a year. A reasonable insurance allocation is 3% of income. That's $1,800 a year. $150 a month. Less than his car insurance.
Roy's profile flagged three risks. We find three live markets and open a position on each.
Position 1:
"US recession by end of 2026?" on Polymarket. Currently 36% odds. $800 in "Yes" contracts. The same recession that causes his company to cut overhead moves this market.
Pays out $2,222 if it hits.
Position 2:
"Will unemployment exceed 6% in 2026?" on Kalshi. Currently 24% odds. $600 in "Yes" contracts. This is the labor market cracking and white collar finance jobs disappearing in volume.
Pays out $2,500 if it hits.
Position 3:
"Negative GDP growth in 2026?" on Polymarket. Currently 15% odds. $400 in "Yes" contracts. The economy actually shrinks. Companies cut everything that isn't revenue-generating. Roy is overhead, and overhead goes first.
Pays out $2,667 if it hits.
Total cost: $1,800 for the year.
These aren't three independent bets on three separate things. The recession cracks the labor market. The cracked labor market contracts GDP. The same world where Roy gets that Slack message is the world where all three positions are printing simultaneously.
Worst case: recession hits, unemployment blows past 6%, GDP goes negative. Roy gets laid off.
But all three pay out. Roy collects $7,389.
Minus the $1,800 he put in: $5,589 net. That's over a month of salary sitting there before he's updated his LinkedIn. A runway to figure out his next steps.
But there are other worlds too.
Maybe only the recession market hits. Roy gets $2,222 and keeps his job. A small consolation on a scary year.
Maybe none of them hit. Roy is out $1,800 and keeps his job.
He still made the pancakes. Still kissed his wife goodbye. And for $150 a month, he knew that if the floor dropped out, he had something to land on.
That's the trade.
The financial system has always had tools like this. Farmers hedge crops. Airlines hedge fuel. Corporations hedge currency.
But Roy? Roy just hopes.
We’re changing that.
Offset everything.