Real-money odds on the biggest questions in politics, sports, tech, crypto and the economy — tracked over 30 days, with the news that's moving them. No account needed.
The 20 biggest crowd calls, the sharpest swings, and what's closing soon — one short email a week, free.
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Each card is a real question about the future. The percentage is the crowd's odds — the price real traders are paying right now on regulated prediction markets.
Prediction markets put money behind every forecast. Decades of research show these money-weighted odds often beat pundits and polls.
Scan the biggest questions, watch which way the odds are moving, read the headlines driving them, and track them over weeks.
CallitIQ shows the crowd's odds on the biggest questions about the future. Each card is a real prediction market — the percentage is the price real traders are paying right now that something will happen, pulled from regulated markets like Kalshi and Polymarket and matched to the news driving it.
The odds come from real-money prediction markets. When traders buy and sell contracts on whether an event will happen, the market price settles at the crowd's implied probability. CallitIQ reads that price directly — we don't set odds ourselves.
Because every forecast has money behind it, prediction-market odds have a strong track record and frequently outperform pundits and polls. They're not guarantees — they're the best real-time estimate of what a crowd of motivated forecasters believes.
No. CallitIQ is an informational aggregator. Odds are for context only and do not constitute financial, investment, or betting advice.
The feed refreshes hourly, and each market is tracked over a rolling 30-day window so you can see how the odds move over time.
No account, sign-up, or payment is required to browse CallitIQ. It's free to read.
A 27% chance means the market is pricing the yes side near 27 cents on the dollar. It is the crowd's implied probability, not a guarantee.
Kalshi is a CFTC-regulated prediction market exchange available in the United States, subject to eligibility rules and state restrictions.
Kalshi is a regulated US exchange using dollar-denominated event contracts. Polymarket is crypto-based and is not generally available to US users.
No. Quora can be useful for manual FAQ research, but CallitIQ does not automatically ingest Quora because there is no clean free public API path.