| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 45% | 45¢ | 59¢ | — | $122 | Trade → |
This prediction market centers on the outcome of the Nicaragua vs Israel sports match; it matters because it pools public expectations about who will prevail and how news will shift those expectations.
Nicaragua and Israel represent teams from different footballing regions with distinct styles, travel considerations, and competitive histories. The specific competition (friendly, qualifier, or tournament) and recent form for each side will shape pre-match expectations and strategic approach.
Market odds are an evolving summary of participant expectations: they move as lineup news, injuries, weather, or other information arrives. Use them alongside official match reports, tactical analysis, and injury updates to form a fuller view.
The market close time is listed on the market page; if not yet set it will be labeled TBD. Many match markets close at kickoff or when the market creator specifies—check the event page shortly before the match for the final timestamp.
Resolution follows the contract description shown on the market page and typically uses the official match result reported by the competition organizer or official statistics provider (for example, the full-time score). Always read the market's resolution rules to confirm whether it uses full time, extra time, penalties, or other criteria.
Such developments tend to change trader expectations and thus market prices; they do not change the settlement criteria. If a key player is ruled out before kickoff, the market will generally react immediately as participants update positions.
Major movers include official starting XI announcements, last-minute injuries or withdrawals, red cards during the game, weather or pitch reports affecting playability, and any official postponement or cancellation notices.
Settlement in those scenarios follows the platform's event resolution policy stated on the market page. Common outcomes are voiding and refunding trades if the match does not meet the contract's minimum play requirements, or waiting for an official rescheduled fixture if the contract allows—check the market rules for the exact procedure.