
Most financial news confirms what you already suspected. PrediXmarkets surfaces the gap — between what prediction markets are pricing, where futures are positioned, and what analysts are saying. When those three disagree, that disagreement is the story. One brief. One line worth forwarding.


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Global market coverage

Polymarket and Kalshi put real money on questions most financial media won't touch directly — which way the next Fed decision goes, when a conflict resolves, what happens to oil. We track those odds, note the volume behind them, and tell you what real money is saying versus what the tape is pricing.

CME FedWatch shows where serious capital is positioned on the next rate decision. When that positioning diverges from what analysts are projecting or what equities are pricing in — that divergence is the most useful signal of the week. We find it and explain it in plain prose.

Every claim has a specific number or a named source attached. No "analysts believe." No "markets are watching." If a fact can't be verified with a date and a source, it doesn't appear in the brief. You can check every line we write.

Equities, crypto, yields, commodities — and the numbers that connect them to daily life. Gas prices, mortgage rates, the state of the American consumer. What moves your portfolio and what moves your monthly budget, covered in the same brief.
"The prediction market angle is something I hadn't seen assembled this way. When Polymarket and CME are pricing the same question differently, PrediXmarkets is usually the first place I see the gap named clearly."
"I already read the Journal. PrediXmarkets gives me the one number my Journal doesn't surface — and that number usually turns out to matter by end of week."
"The disconnect between real-money prediction markets and equity pricing is almost always the most interesting story. This brief treats it that way instead of burying it."
"Specific. Brief. No hedged nothing-burgers. It tells you the number, tells you what it disagrees with, and gets out of the way."
"I forward PrediXmarkets lines to my financial advisor more often than I forward anything from Bloomberg. That is the honest version of this review."
"The only brief I read before my morning meeting that regularly changes something I was planning to say."

Three questions worth answering before you subscribe.
What makes PrediXmarkets different from my WSJ subscription or Bloomberg?
Your WSJ subscription gives you excellent news coverage. Bloomberg gives you data. PrediXmarkets does something different: it reads prediction markets (Polymarket, Kalshi), futures positioning (CME FedWatch), and sell-side analyst consensus simultaneously — and tells you when those three sources are pricing the same event differently. That disagreement is almost never covered directly by traditional financial media. It is, consistently, the most useful thing to know before the open.
Do you give stock picks or investment advice?
No. PrediXmarkets doesn't pick stocks, make predictions, or tell you what to buy or sell. The brief tells you what different markets are pricing and where they diverge. What you do with that is entirely your call. The disclaimer at the bottom of every issue means exactly what it says — this is information, not advice.
What markets and topics do you cover?
US and international equities, crypto, commodities, Treasury yields, forex, and economic indicators — covered through three lenses: what prediction markets are pricing, where futures are positioned, and what analyst consensus shows. Each brief also includes at least one kitchen-table figure — gas prices, mortgage rates, consumer data — because those connect what happens on the tape to what readers feel in daily life.