SimpleFunctions

Will the Democratic party win the governorship in Arizona: Democratic party · GOVPARTYAZ-26

Will the Democratic party win the governorship in Arizona: Democratic party is priced at 78¢ on Kalshi. Current book: 74¢ bid, 78¢ ask, 4¢ spread. This outcome ranks #1 of 2 inside GOVPARTYAZ-26.

Price history

78¢ current

+5¢
70¢80¢
May 27, 2026Jun 19, 2026

Contract brief

If a representative of the Democratic party is inaugurated as the governor of Arizona pursuant to the 2026 election, then the market resolves to Yes.

Outcome

Will the Democratic party win the governorship in Arizona: Democratic party

Rank

#1 of 2

Leader

Will the Democratic party win the governorship in Arizona: Democratic party 74¢

Range

20¢-74¢

Family volume

$387

Identifier

GOVPARTYAZ-26-D

Jun 23, 2026, 10:38 AM UTC · 8m ago

Implied probability

78¢
Latest venue quote
Jun 23, 2026, 10:38 AM UTC · 8m ago

Bid

74¢

Ask

78¢

Spread

24h volume

$2

Family rank

#1 of 2

2 outcomes · GOVPARTYAZ-26

Closes

Nov 3, 2027

Family volume

$387

Orderbook snapshot

74 / 78¢

Kalshi
4¢ spread
BidSize
74¢750
73¢250
72¢120
71¢5.0K
70¢100
AskSize
78¢6.7K
79¢6.6K
80¢5.5K
81¢500
82¢384

Contract terms

What resolves this market.

YES condition

If a representative of the Democratic party is inaugurated as the governor of Arizona pursuant to the 2026 election, then the market resolves to Yes.

Venue

Kalshi

Closes

Nov 3, 2027

Identifier

GOVPARTYAZ-26-D

SF Signal
SF Index
98.62
Regime
neutral

Event family

GOVPARTYAZ-26.

The same race as a probability stack: rank, volume, and where this contract sits against the other outcomes.

Total volume

$387

Outcomes

2

Highest price

Will the Democratic party win the governorship in Arizona: Democratic party 74¢

Current share

1%

Indicators

Yield, cliff risk, volatility, and regime.

Regime

neutral

Score

0.409

Observability

medium

Event type

political

Full indicator table

25.7%
208.5%
Adj IY
99%
3
LAS
0.05

Related readings

Matched from SimpleFunctions blog, opinions, technical guides, concepts, and learn pages.

Browse library
Blogmarkets

Kalshi vs Polymarket: Which Prediction Market Should You Trade?

In-depth comparison of Kalshi and Polymarket for prediction market traders. Regulatory structure, liquidity, fees, API tooling, and cross-venue trading with SimpleFunctions.

Opinioncomparison

Kalshi vs Polymarket: Mechanics, Fees, Regulation, Liquidity (2026)

Side-by-side comparison of Kalshi and Polymarket in 2026. Fee math, calibration data, withdrawal speed, and a decision tree for picking the right venue.

Blogmarkets

Prediction Market Orderbook Analysis: Reading Depth, Spread, and Liquidity

How to read prediction market orderbooks. Binary settlement, spread-as-percentage, depth asymmetry, executable edge calculation, and cross-venue arbitrage analysis.

Technicalguide

Kalshi vs Polymarket: A Developer's Comparison of APIs, Orderbooks, and Liquidity

Data-driven comparison of Kalshi and Polymarket APIs, orderbooks, rate limits, and liquidity. Code examples for building on both prediction markets.

Opinionanalysis

Liquidity Availability Is the Real Edge in Prediction Markets

Implied yield, cliff risk, and overround all describe what to trade. Liquidity Availability Score describes whether the orderbook can absorb the trade. Why LAS is the indicator that decides who actually books P&L.

Opinionanalysis

Implied Yield vs Raw Probability: Why Bond-Adjacent Prediction Markets Need a Different Lens

Why fixed-income-adjacent prediction-market contracts need to be priced in implied yield, not raw probability, with two real Kalshi Fed-decision contracts as a case study.

SimpleFunctions context

Index, screen, query, and monitor.

Open index

How we compute these odds

SimpleFunctions aggregates live prediction-market contracts from Kalshi and Polymarket. Each slug groups contracts that resolve on the same underlying event, identified by venue event_id.

For binary slugs, the headline probability is the liquidity-weighted mid-price across all bound contracts. For multi-outcome slugs (e.g. elections with 3+ candidates), the headline is the leader’s price; we never arithmetically average disjoint outcomes — that would produce a number with no real-world meaning.

Snapshots refresh every 5 minutes during market hours; daily aggregates are computed at 04:00 UTC. The 30-day sparkline is drawn from per-ticker daily means stored in market_indicator_daily; 24h delta and movement events are derived from the same source.