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← How do prediction markets work? Part 4 of 5

How liquidity works in prediction markets

Liquidity is the single biggest predictor of whether a prediction market is accurate. A market with deep liquidity reprices instantly on new information and resists manipulation; a thin market can be moved by a single trader with $500 and an agenda.

How liquidity works in prediction markets


What "liquidity" actually means

Liquidity is the amount of capital sitting on the orderbook (or in the AMM pool) ready to trade. It determines two things: how tight the spread is between the best bid and best ask, and how much size you can trade before the price moves against you. A market with $10M of depth within one cent of mid-price is deeply liquid; a market with $500 total outstanding is not.

Why it matters for accuracy

Academic research on prediction markets consistently finds that accuracy scales with liquidity. Deep markets attract sharp traders who research questions carefully and arbitrage away mispricings. Thin markets are dominated by a handful of opinionated participants whose views may not reflect reality. This is why election markets on Polymarket and Kalshi (deep) consistently beat niche prediction sites (thin) even when the latter have more sophisticated user bases.

How thin markets get manipulated

If a market has only $2,000 of depth, a trader with $5,000 can move the price from 40Β’ to 60Β’ β€” making it look like the market now thinks the event is much more likely, when in reality one person just bought a lot of shares. Journalists and political operatives have occasionally done this to generate headlines. The defense is simple: always check volume and open interest before treating a price as signal.