
Prediction markets see volatility as Trump surges, Gaza ceasefire prospects rise, and AGI likelihood grows
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Another major mover on Polymarket has been the market on whether a ceasefire agreement will be reached in Gaza by the end of June. Just 48 hours ago, the market stood at 34 cents for yes. Following reports from Reuters that Egypt was brokering a new deal that both Hamas and Israel were reportedly considering seriously, the probability shot up to 44 cents before retracing slightly to 41 cents midday today. Traders remain cautious due to prior false starts, but volume has picked up notably, suggesting that sentiment is shifting again in response to new diplomatic signals.
Metaculus, which leans more toward long-term forecasting, has seen subtle but significant movement on its forecast for whether artificial general intelligence, or AGI, will emerge before 2030. The community forecast now sits at 28 percent, up from 25 percent just three weeks ago. That may not sound like much, but it is the largest month-to-month jump since last October. The shift follows a series of announcements from leading AI labs about breakthroughs in multimodal capabilities and agentic reasoning systems. While still a minority view, more forecasters seem willing to entertain the idea that AGI may be closer than previously estimated.
On PredictIt, the Senate control market for the upcoming election made headlines this week as well. Republican control now trades at 61 cents, up from 54 cents earlier this week. A new poll out of Michigan showing the GOP candidate leading in a swing Senate race appears to have fueled the movement. While the shift might seem small, these margins matter in a market where expectations are tightly coupled to fundraising and turnout models.
One emerging trend to watch is the growing divergence between crypto-based markets like Polymarket and expert-curated platforms like Metaculus. On the issue of a potential Russian offensive in northeastern Ukraine, Polymarket odds moved sharply following satellite images circulated on social media, jumping to 52 percent for a new offensive by mid-July. Metaculus remained more conservative, with its forecast only inching up to 39 percent. This reflects a broader pattern we are seeing more often, where crowd sentiment reacts quickly to unverified reports, while calibrated forecasting models remain more measured.
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