Catalyst Intel:
Multiple news articles highlight a significant increase in the wealth of California billionaires, with some reporting a 36-50% growth in the last year. This stark contrast with the struggles of 'workers and families' and the framing of this as a 'crisis of money in US politics' by The Guardian, creates a strong narrative for tax reform and could fuel public support for a billionaire tax initiative. The mention of 'almost $325 million already raised in support and opposition' indicates significant financial backing and opposition, suggesting a high-stakes battle, but the rapid growth in billionaire wealth provides a powerful argument for proponents of the tax, acting as a massive catalyst for its potential passage.
Found: Apr 14, 2026 7:54 AM
Legal Reasoning:
Market A resolves to 'Yes' if a specific ballot initiative is certified by June 25, 2026, for the November 3, 2026 California election. Market B resolves to 'Yes' if such an initiative 'passes' voter approval. For Market B to resolve to 'Yes', the initiative must first be certified and appear on the ballot. Market A imposes a stricter, earlier deadline (June 25, 2026) for this certification compared to the implicit requirements for Market B. If an initiative is certified after June 25, 2026, but still makes it onto the November 3, 2026 ballot and passes voter approval, Market B would resolve to 'Yes' while Market A would resolve to 'No'. This scenario indicates that Market A's conditions are stricter or have an earlier deadline for a prerequisite event compared to Market B's resolution condition, fitting the definition of A_SUBSET_OF_B, despite the parenthetical clause in the definition not being strictly met due to the possibility of certification by June 25 but failure to pass voter approval.
Found: Apr 14, 2026 7:54 AM
OpenAI IPO timing.
When will OpenAI IPO?
[Before Jan 1, 2027]
+13.0%
Cost: $0.870
BUY [YES] on Polymarket ($0.4) AND BUY [NO] on Kalshi ($0.47)
Catalyst Intel:
Multiple news snippets indicate that an OpenAI IPO is anticipated as early as Q4 2026. Specifically, the 'OpenAI’s new $100 ChatGPT Pro plan targets Claude Max with five times the Codex access' snippet mentions a March 2026 valuation and states 'groundwork for an IPO expected as early as the fourth quarter of 2026.' The 'Weekend Reading | OpenAI and Anthropic Race to IPO' snippet also highlights a 'race to go public' between OpenAI and Anthropic, suggesting an imminent event. While some articles mention financial losses, the consistent mention of an impending IPO, along with a massive valuation and recent funding rounds, points towards a strong catalyst for a 'long' trade direction on the 'When will OpenAI IPO?' market.
Found: Apr 13, 2026 5:18 AM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets are tracking the same event: OpenAI completing an Initial Public Offering (IPO) before January 1, 2027. Market A's definition of an IPO and resolution sources align perfectly with the natural interpretation of Market B's conditions. The specific clause in Market A regarding acquisition by an already public company explicitly states a scenario that would implicitly lead to a 'No' resolution in Market B, as OpenAI itself would not have performed an IPO. Therefore, the conditions and outcomes are virtually identical.
Found: Apr 13, 2026 5:18 AM
IPOs
Who will IPO before 2027?
[OpenAI]
+7.0%
Cost: $0.930
BUY [YES] on Polymarket ($0.42) AND BUY [NO] on Kalshi ($0.51)
Catalyst Intel:
Multiple news snippets indicate that several high-profile companies, including SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic, are actively planning or rumored to be planning IPOs in the near future, with some bankers suggesting a June window for SpaceX and H2 2024 for OpenAI/Anthropic. This suggests a strong pipeline of major IPOs before 2027, creating significant market activity and interest.
Found: Apr 14, 2026 8:00 AM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets refer to an IPO by OpenAI. Market A's deadline is "by December 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET", which is functionally identical to Market B's "before Jan 1, 2027". Market A's definition of an IPO ("first sale of stock...to the public on any recognized stock exchange") is a standard understanding of an IPO, and Market B's "confirms an IPO" would rely on the same event. Market A's negative conditions (merger, acquisition, cessation of existence) are implicit in Market B as well; if OpenAI doesn't exist, it can't IPO. There are no material differences in conditions or timeframes that would lead to divergent resolutions.
Found: Apr 14, 2026 8:00 AM
Filibuster change this year?
Filibuster weakened before 2027
[Before 2027]
+7.0%
Cost: $0.930
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.75) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.18) (SUBSET FREE-ROLL)
Catalyst Intel:
The news snippets mention ongoing discussions and pressure regarding the filibuster, primarily in the context of US politics and the 2026 elections. However, there is no definitive news indicating that the filibuster has been weakened or is definitively going to be weakened before 2027. The articles discuss pressure to 'trash' or 'nuke' it, but also mention 'support for filibuster strong'. The other articles are about elections in other countries or unrelated topics. Therefore, there is no massive catalyst for the market 'Filibuster weakened before 2027'.
Found: Apr 11, 2026 7:30 AM
Legal Reasoning:
Market A requires a specific event: a cloture motion passing with fewer than three-fifths of Senators on a legislative matter. For such a motion to pass, the filibuster threshold must first have been lowered for the legislative process. Market B is broader, resolving to "Yes" if the filibuster threshold is lowered in any capacity (e.g., for legislative matters, confirmations, or both) and does not require an instance of a cloture motion passing. If Market A resolves "Yes," it inherently means the filibuster threshold was lowered, making Market B also resolve "Yes." However, Market B could resolve "Yes" without Market A resolving "Yes" if: 1) the threshold is lowered only for confirmations (which Market A explicitly excludes), or 2) the threshold is lowered for legislative matters, but no actual cloture motion passes under the new threshold before the deadline. Therefore, Market A's conditions are stricter than Market B's.
Found: Apr 11, 2026 7:30 AM
Newsom announces presidential run
Will Gavin Newsom announce a run for President of the United States before Jan 1, 2027?
[Before Jan 1, 2027]
+7.0%
Cost: $0.930
BUY [YES] on Polymarket ($0.12) AND BUY [NO] on Kalshi ($0.81)
Catalyst Intel:
The news primarily focuses on Eric Swalwell's withdrawal from the California gubernatorial race due to sexual misconduct allegations, and the subsequent disarray in that race. There is also a brief mention of Pete Buttigieg potentially running for president in 2028. None of these articles provide any direct or indirect information suggesting Gavin Newsom will announce a run for President before Jan 1, 2027. The news is entirely unrelated to Newsom's presidential ambitions.
Found: Apr 13, 2026 10:42 PM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets are asking the same question: will the individual announce a run for President in the 2028 election by December 31, 2026 (Market A) or before January 1, 2027 (Market B). These timeframes are identical. Market A specifies 'officially announces' and Market B specifies 'has announced', both implying a public declaration. Market B explicitly includes 'running for the nomination of any political party', which is implicitly covered by Market A's 'running for U.S. President'.
Found: Apr 13, 2026 10:42 PM
Who will leave the Trump administration
Will Kash Patel leaves Director of the FBI in before 2027?
[:: Director of the FBI]
+6.0%
Cost: $0.940
BUY [YES] on Polymarket ($0.57) AND BUY [NO] on Kalshi ($0.37) (SUBSET FREE-ROLL)
Catalyst Intel:
The provided news snippets mention Kash Patel as 'Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation ('FBI')' in one article and 'FBI Director Kash Patel' in another. This indicates he is currently in the role. However, none of the articles contain any information or speculation about his potential departure from the FBI before 2027. The news focuses on current events and his actions as director, not his job security or future tenure.
Found: Apr 14, 2026 9:18 AM
Legal Reasoning:
Market B's condition is specific: 'Kash Patel leaves as Director of the FBI before 2027'. Market A's condition is broader: 'the listed individual will leave the Trump Administration, or otherwise ceases to be a member of administration by December 31, 2026'. If Kash Patel leaves as Director of the FBI (assuming he was appointed by Trump and thus part of the administration), he is necessarily leaving the Trump Administration. However, Kash Patel could leave the Trump Administration from a different role (e.g., as a White House advisor or another cabinet position) without ever having been Director of the FBI. In such a scenario, Market A would resolve 'Yes' but Market B would resolve 'No'. Thus, Market B's conditions are stricter and represent a subset of Market A's conditions.