Catalyst Intel:
A new UC Berkeley poll indicates that most voters across party lines support taxing billionaires, which is a significant positive catalyst for the potential passage of a California one-time tax on billionaires ballot initiative. The news confirms such an initiative is actively being considered for the 2026 ballot, and strong public support is a key factor for ballot measure success.
Found: Mar 31, 2026 3:36 PM
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: Mar 31, 2026 3:36 PM
Texas Senate Election
Will GOP Nominee be Ken Paxton AND General Election Winner be Republican for Jan 2027?
[Paxton beats Talarico]
+18.0%
Cost: $0.820
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.45) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.37)
Catalyst Intel:
No news was provided to evaluate for a catalyst regarding Ken Paxton's nomination or the general election outcome.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 8:00 AM
Legal Reasoning:
Market B has stricter conditions. Market A resolves 'Yes' if Ken Paxton wins the 2026 midterm Texas U.S. Senate election, regardless of his party affiliation (e.g., if he wins as an independent). Market B, however, requires two specific conditions: Ken Paxton must be the GOP Nominee AND a Republican must win the General Election. Therefore, if Market B resolves 'Yes', Market A must also resolve 'Yes' (because Paxton, as the GOP nominee, won). However, Market A could resolve 'Yes' (if Paxton wins as an independent) while Market B resolves 'No' (because Paxton was not the GOP nominee). This means Market B's conditions are a subset of Market A's conditions for a 'Yes' resolution regarding 'Paxton defeats Talarico'.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 8:00 AM
OpenAI IPO timing.
When will OpenAI IPO?
[Before Jan 1, 2027]
+18.0%
Cost: $0.820
BUY [YES] on Polymarket ($0.34) AND BUY [NO] on Kalshi ($0.48)
Catalyst Intel:
OpenAI is allowing individual investors to access its stock through ETFs, explicitly stating this is happening 'months before' its expected IPO. This is a concrete and immediate step towards a public offering, indicating a much shorter timeline than general speculation or previous reports suggesting 2026.
Found: Mar 31, 2026 4:48 PM
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: Mar 31, 2026 4:48 PM
Texas Senate Election
Will GOP Nominee be Ken Paxton AND General Election Winner be Republican for Jan 2027?
[Paxton beats Talarico]
+18.0%
Cost: $0.820
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.45) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.37)
Catalyst Intel:
No news was provided to evaluate for a catalyst regarding Ken Paxton's nomination or the general election outcome.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 8:00 AM
Legal Reasoning:
For Market A to resolve to 'Paxton beats Talarico', Ken Paxton must be the Republican nominee and win the 2026 Texas U.S. Senate election. This outcome directly matches the conditions for Market B to resolve 'Yes' (GOP Nominee: Ken Paxton, General Election Winner: Republican). The timeframe for a 2026 election, including potential run-offs, would typically see the winner determined and called by news sources (Market A's primary resolution method) well before Market B's 'before Jan 2027' deadline. Assuming standard political definitions and avoiding pedantic edge cases, the conditions and timeframes are virtually identical.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 8:00 AM
AI regulation
AI regulation by 2027?
[By Jan 1, 2027]
+12.0%
Cost: $0.880
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.59) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.29) (SUBSET FREE-ROLL)
Catalyst Intel:
Multiple states are actively pursuing and implementing AI regulation, with several bills already signed into law and others progressing through legislatures as recently as March 2026. This demonstrates a clear and accelerating trend towards AI regulation well before 2027, indicating that regulation is not just a possibility but an ongoing reality.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 10:30 PM
Legal Reasoning:
Market A's conditions are stricter and its deadline is earlier than Market B's. Market A requires a bill to include at least one of four specific provisions (prohibition, training restrictions, usage restrictions, human-in-the-loop) and be signed into law by December 31, 2026. Market B is broader, requiring any bill 'regulating AI' to become law by January 1, 2027. If Market A resolves to 'Yes', it means a specific type of AI regulation occurred by an earlier date, which would satisfy Market B's broader condition and later deadline. However, Market B could resolve to 'Yes' if a bill regulating AI (but not necessarily with Market A's specific provisions) becomes law on January 1, 2027, or if a bill regulating AI (but not with Market A's specific provisions) becomes law by December 31, 2026. Thus, if A happens, B must happen, but B can happen without A happening.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 10:30 PM
IPOs
Who will IPO before 2027?
[OpenAI]
+10.0%
Cost: $0.900
BUY [YES] on Polymarket ($0.38) AND BUY [NO] on Kalshi ($0.52)
Catalyst Intel:
The news provides a massive catalyst regarding SpaceX's IPO plans. Multiple snippets indicate active planning for a SpaceX IPO, with specific mentions of 2026 as a potential year, well before 2027. This includes discussions about fast-tracking for Nasdaq inclusion, E*Trade leading share sales, and the IPO's potential scale. Conversely, OpenAI's news highlights significant financial challenges, including unprofitability and a projected breakeven not until 2030, making an IPO before 2027 highly unlikely. The general IPO market conditions are described as challenging, but the specific and strong signals for SpaceX stand out as a major counter-trend.
Found: Mar 31, 2026 1:49 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: Mar 31, 2026 1:49 AM
IPOs
Who will IPO before 2027?
[Databricks]
+9.0%
Cost: $0.910
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.63) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.28)
Catalyst Intel:
The news explicitly states "OpenAI IPO 2026", indicating a strong likelihood of an IPO within the market's timeframe. While some snippets mention financial challenges and a product shutdown in 2026, the direct IPO timeline is a significant signal. SpaceX also shows strong IPO preparations, with talks of share sales and fast-tracking rules, despite some market skepticism about immediate timing, suggesting a potential IPO before 2027.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 11:37 PM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets concern an IPO by Databricks with identical deadlines (Market A: 'by December 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET'; Market B: 'before Jan 1, 2027'). Market B's confirmation source ('Databricks confirms an IPO') is a subset of Market A's ('official company announcements or credible news sources'). In practice, if an IPO occurs and is confirmed by official company announcements or credible news sources, Databricks itself would almost certainly have confirmed it. The 'No' conditions in Market A are standard implicit understandings for IPO markets and do not create a conflict or a scenario where one market resolves 'Yes' and the other 'No' for the same event. Therefore, the conditions and timeframes are virtually identical.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 11:37 PM
IPOs
Who will IPO before 2027?
[Vanta]
+8.0%
Cost: $0.920
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.8) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.12)
Catalyst Intel:
The news explicitly states 'OpenAI IPO 2026', indicating a strong projection for OpenAI to go public before 2027. This directly addresses the market question 'Who will IPO before 2027?' by providing a specific major company and a timeline within the market's scope. While other snippets discuss SpaceX IPOs, they often mention delays or questions about timing, making OpenAI's 2026 projection a more definitive catalyst for this market.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 11:12 PM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets refer to an IPO by Vanta. Market A's deadline is "by December 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET", which is identical to Market B's "before Jan 1, 2027". The resolution sources and conditions for an IPO confirmation are also functionally equivalent, with Market B's 'confirms an IPO' being covered by Market A's 'official company announcements or credible news sources'. The explicit 'No' conditions in Market A (merger, acquisition, ceases to exist) would implicitly prevent an IPO in Market B, meaning if Market A resolves 'No' for these reasons, Market B would also resolve 'No' because an IPO did not occur.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 11:12 PM
IPOs
Who will IPO before 2027?
[Anysphere (Cursor)]
+7.0%
Cost: $0.930
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.83) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.1)
Catalyst Intel:
News reports indicate strong movement towards IPOs for major companies before 2027. OpenAI is explicitly mentioned with an 'IPO 2026' timeline, and its significant cash burn suggests a need for external funding within 18-24 months. SpaceX has multiple reports detailing active IPO preparations, including talks with E*Trade for share sales, potential Nasdaq rule changes for fast-tracking, and an 'IPO Push Advances,' despite some mentions of delays. These developments collectively represent a massive catalyst for companies IPOing before 2027.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 11:37 PM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets resolve to "Yes" if Anysphere (Cursor) completes an IPO by December 31, 2026. Market A's deadline of "December 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET" is equivalent to Market B's "before Jan 1, 2027". While Market A explicitly mentions negative resolution for mergers/acquisitions/cessation, it is a standard assumption that an IPO for the named entity would not occur if it were acquired or ceased to exist, meaning Market B would also implicitly resolve "No" in such scenarios. The conditions and timeframes are virtually identical.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 11:37 PM
World leaders out this year?
Will Benjamin Netanyahu leave Prime Minister of Israel before Jan 1, 2027?
[:: Prime Minister of Israel]
+7.0%
Cost: $0.930
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.58) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.35)
Catalyst Intel:
The Israeli parliament approved the 2026 state budget, which explicitly allows Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government to avoid early elections and complete its term. This significantly strengthens his political position and reduces the likelihood of him leaving office before January 1, 2027.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 2:54 PM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets resolve to "Yes" if Benjamin Netanyahu announces resignation, steps down, or is removed from the position of Prime Minister of Israel. The deadline for both markets is identical: Market A specifies "by December 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET", while Market B states "before Jan 1, 2027", which covers the exact same period. The conditions and timeframes are virtually identical, meaning if one market resolves to "Yes", the other will as well, and vice-versa. There are no stricter conditions, earlier deadlines, or conflicting rules that would lead to a different resolution.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 2:54 PM
IPOs
Who will IPO before 2027?
[Celonis]
+7.0%
Cost: $0.930
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.79) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.14)
Catalyst Intel:
Multiple news snippets indicate that SpaceX is actively pursuing an IPO, with reports suggesting they plan to file paperwork as soon as this week and a target year of 2026. This, combined with its massive valuation and the scale of the potential offering, constitutes a significant catalyst for the market 'Who will IPO before 2027?'. OpenAI also has a 2026 IPO mentioned, further supporting the likelihood of major IPOs before 2027.
Found: Mar 31, 2026 4:54 AM
Legal Reasoning:
Market A resolves to 'Yes' if Celonis completes an Initial Public Offering (IPO) by December 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, as confirmed by official company announcements or credible news sources. Market B resolves to 'Yes' if Celonis confirms an IPO before January 1, 2027. The term 'confirms an IPO' in Market B, in the context of 'Who will IPO?', is interpreted as the confirmation of the *completion* of the IPO, rather than merely an announcement of intent. Both deadlines are identical (by December 31, 2026). The confirmation sources are also highly similar, with Market B's 'Celonis confirms an IPO' falling under Market A's 'official company announcements or credible news sources'. Therefore, the conditions and timeframes are virtually identical for practical resolution.
Found: Mar 31, 2026 4:54 AM
Annual GDP
GDP growth in 2026?
[0.0 or below]
+6.1%
Cost: $0.939
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.859) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.08)
Catalyst Intel:
The news presents a mixed and sometimes conflicting picture regarding 2026 GDP growth forecasts across different regions. While S&P Global has revised India's FY26 growth forecast upwards to 7.6%, Goldman Sachs has simultaneously lowered India's 2026 forecast to 5.9%. Additionally, forecasts for countries like Sweden and Australia have been downgraded, often citing geopolitical conflicts. There is no clear, widespread, and unified shift in expectations that would constitute a massive catalyst for overall GDP growth in 2026.
Found: Mar 25, 2026 9:12 AM
Legal Reasoning:
Market A specifies the exact data source and methodology (BEA Advance Estimate for Q4 2026, seasonally adjusted and annualized GDP growth rate for full year 2026) for the condition 'GDP growth in 2026 below 0.0'. Market B uses a more general phrasing 'GDP growth in 2026 below 0.0'. Assuming standard definitions for economic data, Market B implicitly refers to the same official metric specified by Market A. Therefore, the conditions and resolution criteria are virtually identical.
Found: Mar 25, 2026 9:12 AM
IPOs
Who will IPO before 2027?
[Glean]
+6.0%
Cost: $0.940
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.88) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.06)
Catalyst Intel:
The news snippets provide strong indications of multiple high-profile companies planning IPOs before 2027. SpaceX is repeatedly mentioned with high IPO odds (52% by June, 87% by September, 93% by year-end) and described as a 'monster' and 'largest IPO in history' with a potential 2026 IPO. AI chip startup Rebellions is explicitly stated to be 'planning to go public later this year' after raising $400 million in a pre-IPO round. Anthropic is also discussed in the context of an impending float. These announcements and strong probabilities for major companies going public constitute a massive catalyst for the market 'Who will IPO before 2027?'.
Found: Mar 30, 2026 10:43 AM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets concern Glean completing an IPO by the exact same deadline (December 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET / before Jan 1, 2027). The resolution sources are standard and compatible. Market A's explicit 'No' conditions (merger, acquisition, cessation of existence) are implicitly covered by Market B's 'Yes' condition, as an IPO would not occur if these events happened instead. There are no conflicting definitions or resolution criteria.