Event

Highest temperature in Los Angeles on June 21?

1 signal across 1 market · $1,063 tracked · resolves Jun 21, 2026

This Polymarket event tracks the highest temperature recorded at Los Angeles International Airport on June 21, 2026, with traders pricing whether the day’s high lands in the listed range. PolySpotter has tracked $1,063 in smart-money activity so far, including a signal from a historically strong 92% winner in a thin market.

Markets (1)

  1. Will the highest temperature in Los Angeles be between 68-69°F on June 21?1 signal · $1,063 tracked

Top trades across all markets

  1. 92% winner on thin market

    Surfaced because a highly proven 92% winner with positive lifetime P&L made a meaningful No bet in a thin weather market, despite only a weak low-activity signal firing.

    $1,063Wallet win rate: 90%Score: 1.5

Top wallets in this event

  1. 0xd251564d37$1,063 · 1 market · 1 alert · 90% wins

FAQs

What are the Polymarket odds for Los Angeles’ highest temperature on June 21?

This event focuses on whether the highest temperature at LAX on June 21 falls between 68–69°F. The live Polymarket price reflects the market-implied probability for that outcome as traders react to forecasts and weather data.

What is the smart money doing on this Los Angeles temperature market?

PolySpotter has tracked $1,063 in smart-money activity across this event, with one recent alert noting a 92% winner entering a thin market. Because liquidity may be limited, individual informed trades can have an outsized effect on the odds.

How does this Los Angeles temperature prediction market resolve?

The market resolves based on the highest temperature recorded on June 21, 2026, at the Los Angeles International Airport Station, using Wunderground’s historical daily data for KLAX.

Why does the LAX temperature matter instead of all of Los Angeles?

The resolution source is specifically the Los Angeles International Airport weather station. Temperatures can vary across the city, so traders should focus on forecasts and observations for KLAX rather than inland Los Angeles readings.