| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In 2027 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Taylor Swift will officially announce Reputation (Taylor's Version) within this calendar year. The outcome matters to fans, rights-watchers, and participants who follow release timing and its effects on streaming and merchandising.
Taylor Swift has been issuing 'Taylor's Version' re-recordings of earlier albums as part of a multi-year effort to regain control of her catalog; timing has varied across releases, with some announced in advance and others arriving with little lead time. Reputation is a high-interest title because of its commercial significance and the history around ownership of its original masters.
Prediction market odds synthesize public signals, insider leaks, and historical patterns into a single market price reflecting collective judgment about whether an official announcement will be made within the defined timeframe. Use the market as a realtime indicator of consensus information rather than a certainty.
An announcement typically means an explicit, verifiable statement that Reputation (Taylor's Version) will be released, issued by Taylor Swift, her management, or the label on official channels (verified social posts, press releases, or retailer/streaming pre-order pages). Unconfirmed leaks, rumors, or third-party speculation without direct attribution usually do not meet the standard—check the market’s specific evidence rules.
That depends on the market’s outcome definition. Some markets require an explicit album-level announcement naming 'Reputation (Taylor's Version)', while others may consider related releases or clear official statements as sufficient. Review the event’s rules to see how partial releases are treated.
Yes—an official pre-order or a release listing labeled 'Reputation (Taylor's Version)' on major retailers or streaming platforms is generally treated as an official announcement if it’s posted by the artist’s team or the label. Make sure the listing is from an authoritative source and aligns with the market’s evidence requirements.
Surprise releases count if the album is officially released under 'Reputation (Taylor's Version)' by verified channels within the calendar year defined by the market. Pay attention to the market’s time-zone and cut-off conventions—those rules determine whether a late-night announcement falls inside the defined period.
Primary signals come from Taylor Swift herself, her management team, and the rights-holding label or distributor (verified social accounts, official press releases, and streaming/retailer listings). Secondary confirmation often appears via major industry outlets after an official post—treat those as corroboration rather than the primary source.