Trader sentiment leans toward "No" at 65% implied probability for a North Korean missile test or launch by March 31, driven by the absence of confirmed activity since the February 7 ballistic missile firing. South Korean and Japanese defense officials report no detected preparations through ongoing surveillance, despite Pyongyang's threats during Kim Jong Un's recent visits to missile facilities and warship launch sites. Historical testing patterns are sporadic, often linked to major US-South Korea drills—which recently concluded without retaliation—or diplomatic escalations absent here. This lull, amid steady allied monitoring, underpins the wisdom-of-crowds consensus in current odds.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedNorth Korea missile test/launch by March 31?
North Korea missile test/launch by March 31?
$15,184 Vol.
$15,184 Vol.
$15,184 Vol.
$15,184 Vol.
Only launches of ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and anti-ship missiles will qualify toward a “Yes” resolution.
Launches of other systems such as SAMs, MLRS/rocket artillery, torpedoes, etc., will not qualify toward a "Yes" resolution.
The market resolution will be based on publicly available information from reliable sources such as official government statements, reports from international monitoring bodies like the United Nations, or reports from reputable international media.
Market Opened: Mar 16, 2026, 5:15 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Only launches of ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and anti-ship missiles will qualify toward a “Yes” resolution.
Launches of other systems such as SAMs, MLRS/rocket artillery, torpedoes, etc., will not qualify toward a "Yes" resolution.
The market resolution will be based on publicly available information from reliable sources such as official government statements, reports from international monitoring bodies like the United Nations, or reports from reputable international media.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader sentiment leans toward "No" at 65% implied probability for a North Korean missile test or launch by March 31, driven by the absence of confirmed activity since the February 7 ballistic missile firing. South Korean and Japanese defense officials report no detected preparations through ongoing surveillance, despite Pyongyang's threats during Kim Jong Un's recent visits to missile facilities and warship launch sites. Historical testing patterns are sporadic, often linked to major US-South Korea drills—which recently concluded without retaliation—or diplomatic escalations absent here. This lull, amid steady allied monitoring, underpins the wisdom-of-crowds consensus in current odds.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated
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