Catalyst Intel:
Multiple significant catalysts are present, pointing in opposing directions. Arguments for the tax are strengthened by news of 'Thousands of Layoffs at California Hospitals Underscore Calls for Billionaire Tax,' linking the initiative to critical patient care and healthcare funding. Conversely, strong arguments against the tax include reports that 'Billionaires are bolting for Florida from the West Coast and taking billions in tax revenue with them' due to proposed wealth taxes, and a 'New Hoover Institute Study Tears Apart California’s Billionaire Tax,' highlighting potential negative economic impacts and capital flight risks. These developments are actively shaping the public debate.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 7:48 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: Apr 2, 2026 7:48 PM
OpenAI IPO timing.
When will OpenAI IPO?
[Before Jan 1, 2027]
+19.0%
Cost: $0.810
BUY [YES] on Polymarket ($0.37) AND BUY [NO] on Kalshi ($0.44)
Catalyst Intel:
Multiple news snippets indicate that OpenAI is actively preparing for an IPO, with one stating, 'Currently, OpenAI's listing has entered its final sprint, drawing global attention.' Other snippets mention OpenAI 'eyeing public markets,' 'preparing for historic public debuts,' and 'working on plans for an IPO this year,' including streamlining product lines to complete the IPO this year. This collective information strongly suggests an accelerated timeline for the IPO, indicating a massive catalyst.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 12:18 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: Apr 2, 2026 12:18 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
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
IPOs
Who will IPO before 2027?
[Anysphere (Cursor)]
+16.0%
Cost: $0.840
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.76) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.08)
Catalyst Intel:
Multiple news snippets confirm that SpaceX has confidentially filed for an IPO and could go public as early as June, well before 2027. Similarly, OpenAI is mentioned as having a 'potential OpenAI IPO later this year.' These are strong indicators of major companies going public within the specified timeframe, representing a significant catalyst for the 'Who will IPO before 2027?' market.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 2:48 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: Apr 2, 2026 2:48 PM
IPOs
Who will IPO before 2027?
[OpenAI]
+13.0%
Cost: $0.870
BUY [YES] on Polymarket ($0.38) AND BUY [NO] on Kalshi ($0.49)
Catalyst Intel:
Multiple reports confirm SpaceX has confidentially filed for an IPO, with a potential listing as early as June 2024. OpenAI is also indicated to have a potential IPO later this year, and Anthropic is 'gearing up' for one. These developments significantly increase the probability of a major company IPOing before 2027.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 2:48 PM
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 2, 2026 2:48 PM
AI regulation
AI regulation by 2027?
[By Jan 1, 2027]
+10.0%
Cost: $0.900
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.6) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.3) (SUBSET FREE-ROLL)
Catalyst Intel:
The news clearly indicates that the EU AI Act entered into force in August 2024, with enforcement being applied in phases through 2027. While some specific obligations for high-risk AI systems are delayed until December 2027, the regulatory framework is established and will be fully implemented by the specified year. This confirms that AI regulation will be in place by 2027.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 6:00 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: Apr 2, 2026 6:00 PM
Bernie Sanders endorsements
Will Bernie Sanders endorse James Talarico in the 2026 United States Senate election in Texas before Nov 3, 2026?
[James Talarico]
+9.0%
Cost: $0.910
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.2) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.71)
Catalyst Intel:
The news snippets mention James Talarico's progressive platform, specifically his promise to "take on GOP billionaires," which aligns with Bernie Sanders' political ideology. However, there is no direct information or strong indirect evidence in the provided text to suggest that Bernie Sanders has endorsed, is considering endorsing, or is even aware of James Talarico's campaign for the 2026 United States Senate election in Texas. The mention of Bernie Sanders is only in the context of independent U.S. senators, not in relation to Talarico. Therefore, no massive catalyst for an endorsement has been found.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 5:30 PM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets concern Bernie Sanders endorsing James Talarico for the 2026 United States Senate election in Texas. Market A's condition of "announces that he will vote for or endorses" is covered by Market B's "publicly endorses"; an announcement leading to "consensus of credible reporting" (Market A's source) would inherently be a public endorsement. The deadlines are also virtually identical: Market A's deadline is "the day before the scheduled election at 11:59 PM ET" (November 2, 2026, 11:59 PM ET for a November 3, 2026 election), and Market B's deadline is "before Nov 3, 2026" (meaning up to and including November 2, 2026). If one market resolves to "Yes", the other must also resolve to "Yes", and vice-versa.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 5:30 PM
IPOs
Who will IPO before 2027?
[Anduril]
+7.0%
Cost: $0.930
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.83) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.1)
Catalyst Intel:
Multiple news snippets indicate a massive catalyst for the 'Who will IPO before 2027?' market. SpaceX has confidentially filed for an IPO and reports suggest it could go public as early as June, well before 2027. OpenAI is also mentioned as having a 'potential IPO later this year.' Additionally, Anthropic (Claude) is 'gearing up for an IPO.' These developments provide strong evidence that major companies are indeed moving towards an IPO within the specified timeframe.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 2:48 PM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets track the same core event (Anduril's Initial Public Offering) with identical deadlines ('by December 31, 2026' and 'before Jan 1, 2027' are equivalent). The resolution criteria for 'completes an IPO' (Market A) and 'confirms an IPO' (Market B) are considered equivalent for the purpose of a prediction market resolving on the occurrence of an IPO, especially when applying standard definitions. Market A's explicit 'No' conditions (merger, acquisition) would inherently prevent Market B's 'Yes' condition from being met by Anduril as the original entity. The resolution sources are also compatible.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 2:48 PM
Maine Senate race
Will Republicans win the Senate race in Maine?
[:: Current incumbent: Susan Collins]
+6.0%
Cost: $0.940
BUY [YES] on Polymarket ($0.24) AND BUY [NO] on Kalshi ($0.7)
Catalyst Intel:
The news explicitly states that "Incumbent Democratic governor Janet Mills is term-limited and cannot seek re-election to a third consecutive term (she’s running for US Senate instead)." The entry of a popular, incumbent Democratic governor into the US Senate race is a significant development that strengthens the Democratic position and makes it more challenging for Republicans to win.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 6:36 PM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets resolve based on the outcome of the 2026 Maine U.S. Senate election. Market A resolves to the winner of this election. Market B resolves to Yes if a Republican is sworn in for the term beginning in 2027. Being sworn in is the direct and expected procedural consequence of winning the election. Assuming standard political processes and ignoring highly improbable edge cases, if a Republican wins the election (Market A), they will be sworn in (Market B), and if a Republican is sworn in (Market B), they must have won the election (Market A). The conditions are virtually identical in their real-world implications.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 6:36 PM
Annual GDP
GDP growth in 2026?
[0.0 or below]
+6.0%
Cost: $0.940
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.87) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.07)
Catalyst Intel:
The news snippets indicate a general trend of downgraded GDP growth forecasts for 2026 across several major economies, including Germany, the US, Thailand, and China, due to factors such as geopolitical conflicts, energy shocks, and inflation. While AI is expected to progress, economists do not foresee a dramatic break from current economic trends or a massive boost to GDP growth. There is no evidence of a massive positive catalyst; rather, the sentiment points towards headwinds and softening growth.
Found: Apr 2, 2026 7:30 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.