| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inter | 40% | 40¢ | 41¢ | — | $142K | Trade → |
| Milan | 30% | 29¢ | 30¢ | — | $71K | Trade → |
| Tie | 31% | 30¢ | 31¢ | — | $6K | Trade → |
This market lets participants trade on the outcome of the Milan vs Inter match and aggregates real‑time expectations about which result will occur. It matters because it reflects how fans, analysts, and traders react to news and match developments.
The Milan vs Inter fixture — the Derby della Madonnina — is one of Italy's most intense club rivalries with a long history of close, emotionally charged matches. Seasonal context (league position, fixture congestion, European commitments) and recent form for both clubs shape pre‑match expectations. Managerial tactics, injuries, and discipline can tilt advantage on matchday.
Market prices are snapshots of collective belief at a given time and change as new information arrives; they are not guarantees of outcome. Use them as a dynamic signal that incorporates public reaction to injuries, lineups, and news rather than a fixed prediction.
A three‑outcome match market typically includes a Milan win, a draw, and an Inter win; check the market page for the precise labels used for each outcome.
The market close time is listed as TBD on the page — watch the market for an updated deadline. Resolution is based on the official final score from the competition organizers; consult the platform's rulebook for whether settlement uses the end of regular time only or includes extra time/penalties.
Starting lineups, last‑minute injury or suspension news for key attackers, defenders, or the goalkeeper, and official managerial comments about tactics or team selection are most likely to shift market prices.
Head‑to‑head history offers useful context because derby psychology matters, but it should be balanced with current season form, injuries, and situational factors — recent context often matters more than distant past results.
Traded volume shows how much money has exchanged hands and is a proxy for liquidity and market engagement; $4,377 indicates modest activity, so prices may be more sensitive to new information and larger trades than in a high‑volume market.