| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| before Jul 1, 2026 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether artist Fetty Wap will publish a new video (music video, vlog, clip, or similar) before July. It matters to traders who follow short-term artist activity and social media-driven events.
Fetty Wap is a recording artist who releases music and promotional content across platforms such as YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok; his posting cadence has varied with releases, collaborations, and personal circumstances. Unexpected singles, guest appearances, or promotional pushes can prompt surprise uploads, so monitoring official channels and collaborator announcements is important.
Prediction market odds reflect the aggregated expectations of traders about whether a qualifying new video will appear before the cutoff; they update as new information arrives and should be interpreted as the market consensus rather than a guarantee.
A 'new video' typically means originally created video content that is first made publicly accessible on or before the cutoff date on an account clearly attributable to Fetty Wap; the event’s official resolution criteria determine which platforms and types of posts qualify and whether previously released material reuploaded counts.
Short-form teasers or clips can count if they are newly created and publicly posted in a way that meets the event’s definition of a qualifying video; check the event rules to confirm whether brief snippets are eligible.
That depends on attribution: the video may count if it is clearly attributable to Fetty Wap (he appears or is credited) and if the event’s rules accept posts on collaborator channels; some markets require posts on the artist’s official channels.
Many markets resolve based on whether a verifiable public posting occurred before the cutoff; if a post is removed, archival evidence (timestamps, third-party reporting, or screenshots) and the exchange’s verification process determine whether it is accepted.
The market’s official event page or rulebook specifies the timezone used for the cutoff (exchanges commonly use UTC or their local time); consult the event details to confirm the exact resolution timezone.