| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marcos Giron | 71% | 68¢ | 71¢ | — | $122 | Trade → |
| Daniel Merida | 30% | 28¢ | 30¢ | — | $64 | Trade → |
This prediction market asks which competitor will win the Merida vs Giron matchup; it aggregates trader expectations and can provide a continuously updating gauge of how observers view each side's chances. It matters to bettors and observers who want a market-based snapshot of anticipated outcomes.
Merida and Giron are the two named competitors in this scheduled sporting contest; the market covers the head-to-head outcome rather than prop submarkets unless otherwise specified. Exact sport, venue, and start time are determined by the event organizer — check official schedules for match details — and these contextual details (surface, competition stage, tournament importance) will shape how traders value the market.
Market prices reflect the aggregated beliefs of participants based on available information and will move as new data (injuries, lineups, weather, in-play events) becomes public. Higher prices indicate stronger market confidence in an outcome, while low volume can make prices more sensitive to single trades.
This market offers two mutually exclusive outcomes corresponding to which competitor wins the match: a Merida win or a Giron win. Check the market page for any additional resolution rules or submarkets.
Market close is listed as TBD; typically the market will close at or just before the official match start or when the event organizer posts a definitive start time. Resolution follows the event organizer's official result once the match is complete.
A win is determined by the official result reported by the event organizer or governing body for the match. If the contest uses tie-breakers, penalties, or other tie-resolution rules, the market resolves according to those official rules—consult the market's rule page for specifics.
Immediate-impact news includes confirmed lineups, last-minute injuries or withdrawals, weather delays, and official in-play events (goals, sets, periods). Announcements from teams, tournament officials, or credible reporters typically trigger the largest price moves.
Yes—total volume reflects liquidity and how much capital has been committed. Lower total volume means prices can be more volatile and more easily shifted by individual trades, while higher volume indicates broader participation and typically more stable market-implied expectations.