Arbitrage Radar

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7 Active Trades
Billionaire one-time wealth tax on California ballot?

Will a one-time tax on billionaires ballot initiative in California pass? [In 2026]

+30.0%
Cost: $0.700
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.31) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.39) (SUBSET FREE-ROLL)
Polymarket Trade ↗
YES
$0.700
NO
$0.310
Kalshi Trade ↗
YES
$0.390
NO
$0.620
Catalyst Intel: News snippets directly mention a 'proposed Billionaire Tax Act in California' aimed at funding education and healthcare, which is a clear and massive catalyst for the market. However, the news also highlights significant opposition, with critics fearing it could harm innovation, cause economic instability, and prompt billionaires and businesses to relocate. The California Chamber of Commerce, a powerful business advocacy group, is noted for opposing 'costly' measures, suggesting strong lobbying against such a tax.
Found: Apr 6, 2026 10:36 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: Apr 6, 2026 10:36 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)
Polymarket Trade ↗
YES
$0.560
NO
$0.450
Kalshi Trade ↗
YES
$0.370
NO
$0.640
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)
Polymarket Trade ↗
YES
$0.560
NO
$0.450
Kalshi Trade ↗
YES
$0.370
NO
$0.640
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
OpenAI IPO timing.

When will OpenAI IPO? [Before Jan 1, 2027]

+8.0%
Cost: $0.920
BUY [YES] on Polymarket ($0.41) AND BUY [NO] on Kalshi ($0.51)
Polymarket Trade ↗
YES
$0.410
NO
$0.620
Kalshi Trade ↗
YES
$0.510
NO
$0.510
Catalyst Intel: OpenAI's CFO, Sarah Friar, has explicitly stated that the company is not ready for an IPO in 2026, citing concerns about profitability, revenue growth supporting spending commitments, and overall financial readiness. This is a significant statement from a key executive, indicating a potential delay or increased uncertainty regarding the IPO timeline.
Found: Apr 6, 2026 11:18 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 6, 2026 11:18 PM
IPOs

Who will IPO before 2027? [Databricks]

+7.0%
Cost: $0.930
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.66) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.27)
Polymarket Trade ↗
YES
$0.350
NO
$0.660
Kalshi Trade ↗
YES
$0.270
NO
$0.770
Catalyst Intel: News indicates that SpaceX is actively preparing for an IPO, with reports of an "early June roadshow" and expectations for an IPO in "this year" (2024) or "2026", all before 2027. This provides a strong candidate for the market "Who will IPO before 2027?". Conversely, OpenAI faces internal disagreements and financial concerns, making a pre-2027 IPO less likely.
Found: Apr 7, 2026 12:00 AM
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: Apr 7, 2026 12:00 AM
Hottest year ever

Will 2026 be the hottest year on record? [Hottest]

+7.0%
Cost: $0.930
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.67) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.26) (SUBSET FREE-ROLL)
Polymarket Trade ↗
YES
$0.340
NO
$0.670
Kalshi Trade ↗
YES
$0.260
NO
$0.790
Catalyst Intel: The news snippet discusses the 2026 Grammy Awards winners and nominees. This information is entirely unrelated to climate, temperature, or the likelihood of 2026 being the hottest year on record. Therefore, it does not provide any catalyst for the specified market.
Found: Apr 6, 2026 11:42 PM
Legal Reasoning: Market A determines the numerical rank of 2026 among all years. If Market A resolves that 2026 is the #1 hottest year on record, this means its temperature value is higher than all preceding years, including 2025. Furthermore, applying real-world logic as per instructions, if 2026 is the hottest year on record, its temperature value will almost certainly exceed 1.28 degrees Celsius. Therefore, if Market A resolves to 2026 being the #1 hottest year, Market B's conditions (2026 > 2025 AND 2026 > 1.28 C) would be met. However, Market B's conditions can be met (e.g., 2026 is hotter than 2025 and above 1.28C) without 2026 being the absolute #1 hottest year on record (e.g., if an earlier year like 2023 was even hotter than 2026). Thus, the outcome where Market A resolves to 2026 being #1 is a stricter condition that implies Market B's conditions are met.
Found: Apr 6, 2026 11:42 PM
AI regulation

AI regulation by 2027? [By Jan 1, 2027]

+7.0%
Cost: $0.930
BUY [NO] on Polymarket ($0.71) AND BUY [YES] on Kalshi ($0.22) (SUBSET FREE-ROLL)
Polymarket Trade ↗
YES
$0.420
NO
$0.710
Kalshi Trade ↗
YES
$0.220
NO
$0.800
Catalyst Intel: The news indicates that as of March 2026, American AI regulation remains "undefined," despite a White House framework and ongoing state-level legislative efforts. Significant opposition, vetoes, and stalled bills in key states like California suggest a slow and challenging path to comprehensive, defined regulation by 2027.
Found: Apr 7, 2026 6:12 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 7, 2026 6:12 AM