It turns out that 92 percent of the bettors who took the bet wagered that Trump would lie a lot. Using The Washington Post Fact Checker as the umpire of truth, Trump clocked in with six falsehoods during his speech. That cost the bookmaker $276,000.

Included among the winning wagers was one for $25,000, one for $20,000 and one for $15,000, or three gamblers who thought they had a sure thing.

The bookmakers were gambling that, because Trump was constrained by an eight-minute window for his address, he wouldn’t have the time to lie four times.

But he did.

Apparently BookMaker.eu is hoping to recoup some of its losses. It announced another proposition this week based on Trump’s truthfulness during the duration of his presidency.

With the news that Trump has passed 10,000 false statements during his time in office this week, the bookmaker is offering an over/under on what the final number of falsehoods will be.

It has set the betting number at 22,500, with gamblers allowed to choose above or below that number with a line of 115, which means you need to bet $115 to get a $100 profit.