AI Signal Dashboard
Last updated: 7 hours ago
Top Undervalued
+14.9¢
22°C(Yes)
+12.5¢
24°C(No)
+8.5¢
23°C(No)
Highest temperature in Taipei on April 7? AI analysis: • +14.9¢ undervalued • Live Prediction Market fair value & mispricing alerts.
Undervalued Options Insights:
According to the latest forecasts from Taiwan's Central Weather Administration (CWA) and other mains...
🔓 Unlock Mispricing Insights (Pro)
Real-time High Yield Opportunities
View MoreAll
Outcomes
Market
Price
AI Fair
Value
Value
Edge
22°C
YesNo
0.05¢
99.95¢
15¢
85¢
+14.9¢
0¢
24°C
YesNo
47.5¢
52.5¢
35¢
65¢
0¢
+12.5¢
Expand to view all 11 options
⚠️ Risk Warning: Live data may lag! Prices can shift instantly due to news or low liquidity. Before trading, use AI Chat for [Live Recalculate], [Check Liquidity], [Trollbox Radar], or review [Fair Value Logic] to verify.
Exotics
This is a prediction market for the highest temperature on a specific day in a specific city (Taipei). While weather is an everyday topic, betting on the exact temperature for a particular date and observation station is relatively niche for those who aren't weather enthusiasts.
Movers
April 5, 2026 - April 6, 2026, the '25°C or higher' option dropped from 66c to 54.5c, while the '24°C' option rebounded from 25c to 32.5c. This was caused by updated weather models and CWA forecasts confirming increased rain probabilities, lowering expected daytime highs to around 24°C.
April 3, 2026 - April 4, 2026, the price of the '24°C' option plummeted from 32.5c to 17.5c, while the '25°C or higher' option surged to 46.5c before dropping back to 36.5c. This was caused by sharp short-term adjustments in weather forecasts due to changing frontal systems and precipitation probabilities.
April 3, 2026 - April 4, 2026, the price of the '22°C' option dropped from 19.5c to 9c before slightly rebounding, primarily due to market capital shifting its bets towards higher temperature ranges.
Divergence
Polymarket currently implies a 54.5% probability for '25°C or higher', which significantly diverges from mainstream forecasts by Taiwan's CWA (predicting 21-24°C) and AccuWeather (predicting 21°C/70°F) [7, 16]. This divergence is likely due to traders underestimating the cooling effect of the forecasted rainy and cloudy conditions, or relying on a few aggressive global weather models.