Catalyst Intel:
The news snippets indicate strong public support for a billionaire tax in California, with one article explicitly stating 'California voters favor billionaire tax'. The 'Letter' snippet also highlights public sentiment for billionaires to 'pay taxes like us'. Furthermore, the trend of other blue states exploring wealth/exit taxes suggests a broader political climate that could favor such an initiative in California. While the 'tightwad' articles are unrelated, and the Kansas City earnings tax results are for a different state, the direct mentions of voter favorability and the general political trend in blue states act as a significant positive catalyst for the ballot initiative's passage.
Found: Apr 8, 2026 12:00 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 8, 2026 12:00 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
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]
+11.0%
Cost: $0.890
BUY [YES] on Polymarket ($0.39) AND BUY [NO] on Kalshi ($0.5)
Catalyst Intel:
Multiple news snippets indicate that OpenAI is actively preparing for an IPO, with mentions of 'approaching two major milestones this year' including the IPO, 'potentially planning for an IPO later this year,' and 'IPO prep.' The opening of a DC office and a new lobbying posture also suggest a move towards public scrutiny. While there are concerns about 'drama' and 'PR woes,' the consistent reporting of an impending IPO, potentially 'later this year' or 'before the end of 2026,' acts as a strong positive catalyst for the market.
Found: Apr 8, 2026 12:54 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 8, 2026 12:54 PM
AI regulation
AI regulation by 2027?
[By Jan 1, 2027]
+9.0%
Cost: $0.910
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.7) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.21) (SUBSET FREE-ROLL)
Catalyst Intel:
The news snippets indicate a strong global push towards AI regulation, with the EU AI Act already promulgated and expected to be fully implemented by 2027. India is also actively working on AI legislation, and even in the US, despite some stalls, the topic is being debated. The mention of 'full implementation expected by 2027' for the EU AI Act, a 'first comprehensive attempt to regulate AI globally,' strongly suggests that significant AI regulation will be in place by 2027, making it a massive catalyst for the market.
Found: Apr 8, 2026 4:54 AM
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 8, 2026 4:54 AM
Montana Senate race
Will Democratics win the Senate race in Montana?
[::]
+6.1%
Cost: $0.939
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.849) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.09)
Catalyst Intel:
The provided news snippets do not contain a massive catalyst specifically for the Democratic party winning the Senate race in Montana. While there's mention of the GOP field in Montana and a general shift towards Democrats in some House races, there's no definitive news indicating a significant event that would drastically alter the Montana Senate race in favor of Democrats. The 'Senate Leadership Fund' investment is for the GOP, and other articles discuss different elections or general trends without a direct, strong impact on Montana's Senate outcome.
Found: Apr 8, 2026 7:48 AM
Legal Reasoning:
Market A resolves based on the winner of the 2026 Montana U.S. Senate election. Market B resolves if a representative of the Democratic party is sworn in as a Senator for the term beginning in 2027. Winning the election is a direct and necessary prerequisite to being sworn in. As per the critical instructions, if Market A's outcome is a guaranteed, procedural impossibility to bypass in order to achieve Market B's outcome, the markets should be treated as equivalent. Both markets also define party representation consistently as the official nominee. The slight difference in resolution timing (election results vs. swearing-in) does not create a scenario where one could occur without the other, ignoring pedantic edge cases.
Found: Apr 8, 2026 7:48 AM
Michigan Governor
Will the Republican party win the governorship in Michigan
[Republican party]
+6.0%
Cost: $0.940
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.77) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.17)
Catalyst Intel:
The provided news snippets offer some context on Michigan politics (Trump's 2024 win, a battleground Senate seat in 2026, and a controversial Democratic Senate candidate), but there is no direct information about the Michigan gubernatorial race in 2026. While Trump's 2024 win in Michigan could be seen as a positive sign for Republicans, it's not a 'massive catalyst' specifically for the gubernatorial race. The other articles discuss national trends, other states, or the Michigan Senate race, not the governorship. Therefore, no massive catalyst for the Republican party winning the Michigan governorship is present in these snippets.
Found: Apr 8, 2026 10:12 AM
Legal Reasoning:
Both markets resolve based on the outcome of the 2026 Michigan gubernatorial election, specifically whether the official Republican nominee wins. Market A explicitly defines a representative as the nominee. Market B's condition 'representative of the Republican party is inaugurated' assumes the official nominee wins and is subsequently inaugurated, which is a direct and guaranteed consequence of winning the election. The fundamental event determining the outcome for the 'Republican party' is identical in both cases.
Found: Apr 8, 2026 10:12 AM
Filibuster change this year?
Filibuster weakened before 2027
[Before 2027]
+6.0%
Cost: $0.940
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.75) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.19) (SUBSET FREE-ROLL)
Catalyst Intel:
The news indicates that Republicans are actively using "filibuster-proof" legislative processes, such as reconciliation, to bypass Democratic obstruction and pass their priorities. This demonstrates a practical weakening of the filibuster's power in legislative action, occurring before 2027.
Found: Apr 7, 2026 9:06 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 7, 2026 9:06 AM
Annual GDP
GDP growth in 2026?
[0.0 or below]
+5.1%
Cost: $0.949
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.879) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.07)
Catalyst Intel:
Multiple economic forecasts for 2026, including those for Canada, ASEAN+3, and India, explicitly cite the ongoing Middle East conflict/Iran war as a significant source of uncertainty and a downside risk to GDP growth projections. The ASEAN+3 Macroeconomic Research Office (AMRO) specifically states its 2026 growth forecast would be higher if not for the Iran war, indicating a widespread negative impact on global economic prospects.
Found: Apr 7, 2026 2:36 PM
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.