Will the next governing coalition of New Zealand include Labour + NZF?
Traders on Polymarket are currently positioning around "Will the next governing coalition of New Zealand include Labour + NZF?" with an implied probability of 1.1%. The market values YES exposure at 1.1¢ and NO exposure at 62.1¢, reflecting evolving expectations across geopolitical and macro event flows. Liquidity remains low, supported by approximately $83 in 24-hour activity.
May 17, 2026
Traders on Polymarket are currently positioning around "Will the next governing coalition of New Zealand include Labour + NZF?" with an implied probability of 1.1%.
The market values YES exposure at 1.1¢ and NO exposure at 62.1¢, reflecting evolving expectations across geopolitical and macro event flows.
Liquidity remains low, supported by approximately $83 in 24-hour activity.
Last Updated: 2026-05-17T14:19:12.493Z
Current Market Pricing
YES Price
1.1¢
Bullish probability pricing
NO Price
62.1¢
Bearish probability pricing
Prediction markets currently imply a live probability of approximately 1.1%.
Market Structure
Probability
1.1%
Spread
0.368
Liquidity
Low
Volume (24h)
$83
Markets with tighter spreads and higher liquidity generally indicate stronger trader participation and more efficient price discovery.
Resolution Criteria
A general election is scheduled to be held in New Zealand on November 7, 2026.
This market will resolve to the first ruling coalition of parties that forms after the next New Zealand general election.
A party will only be considered part of the ruling coalition if it participates in the governing coalition and provides at least one Cabinet minister. Parties that merely support the government from outside Cabinet, including through confidence-and-supply agreements or similar arrangements, without holding a Cabinet post will not qualify.
The following parties will be considered for this market: ACT New Zealand (ACT), Labour Party (Labour), Te Pāti Māori (Maori), National Party (National), Green Party (Green), and New Zealand First Party (NZF). All other parties will not be considered.
Resolution will be based on the listed option that most completely matches the parties included in the coalition. If the coalition formed after the election includes all of the parties listed in a market option, along with any other parties, that option will resolve to “Yes” unless there exists another market option that more completely covers the coalition. A listed option will not resolve to “Yes” if any of its listed parties are not included in the coalition.
For example:
-
If the governing coalition includes Labour + Green + ACT, but no option explicitly lists those three together, the market will resolve to “Labour + Green” if that option is listed and no listed option more completely matches the coalition.
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If the governing coalition includes National + ACT + NZF, the option “National + ACT + NZF” will resolve to “Yes”, while “National + ACT” will resolve to “No”.
In the event that the ruling coalition includes all parties for multiple market options, and each option contains an equal number of coalition parties, the tie will be resolved in favor of the option whose listed parties together hold the greater number of seats in the newly elected House of Representatives. If this presents another tie, this market will resolve in favor of the listed option whose parties received the greatest number of valid party votes.
If any party forms a single-party majority government, the listed option for that party will be considered the governing coalition.
If the governing coalition does not include all parties in any listed option, this market will resolve to “Other”.
This market may resolve once the first government is officially confirmed following the appointment of the Prime Minister and ministers by the Governor-General after the 2026 New Zealand general election, with ministers appointed under non-caretaker circumstances.
If the next New Zealand ruling coalition after the election is not confirmed by December 31, 2027, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to “Other”.
This market will resolve based on a consensus of credible reporting. In case of ambiguity, this market will resolve based on official information from the government of New Zealand.
Market Interpretation
Prediction markets operate as continuously updating consensus systems where price is not prediction — it is compressed belief under liquidity pressure.
At any moment, pricing reflects aggregated trader positioning across:
Current pricing structure implies:
- YES trades near 1.1¢
- NO trades near 62.1¢
- Implied probability clusters around 1.1%
This is not static forecasting — it is a continuously reweighted probability surface that reacts to incoming information in real time.
Liquidity & Conviction Analysis
As of May 17, 2026 at 10:09 AM, liquidity concentration defines how sharply this market can absorb and reflect new information.
This market currently reflects a moderate-to-structured liquidity regime, where price discovery is active but still sensitive to directional order flow.
Key structural behaviors:
- tighter liquidity → faster repricing cycles
- fragmented liquidity → sharper volatility spikes
- concentrated flow → stronger directional conviction
- thin participation → narrative-driven swings dominate
In practice, liquidity is not just a metric — it is the stability coefficient of the probability surface.
Why This Signal Exists in Prediction Markets
Prediction markets function as real-time belief compression layers where distributed information becomes executable probability.
Each trade represents:
- updated information processing
- position hedging against future states
- narrative reinforcement or rejection
- asymmetric knowledge correction
Unlike polling or forecasting models, these systems continuously self-correct through financial exposure, making them sensitive to:
This produces a live probabilistic system that behaves closer to a market-driven intelligence engine than a static prediction tool.
Market Structure Transition
As of May 17, 2026 at 10:09 AM, prediction markets have evolved into persistent global probability infrastructure operating across geopolitics, elections, macroeconomics, AI systems, central bank policy, trade wars, financial markets, Trump–Xi summit negotiations, tariff diplomacy, sovereign risk, and real-world event forecasting.
Current structural characteristics:
- continuous pricing of world events
- high-frequency narrative absorption
- cross-market correlation formation
- liquidity-driven consensus formation
- rapid repricing of geopolitical risk
Platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi now function as high-throughput probability engines, with cumulative sector trading volume exceeding $150B+ and sustained monthly flow consistently above $25B throughout major 2026 trading cycles.
By April 2026 alone, combined prediction market activity approached nearly $30B in monthly volume, with Kalshi processing approximately $14.8B and Polymarket generating roughly $10.2B in market activity during the same period.
Market structure has therefore shifted far beyond episodic retail speculation into continuous global liquidity formation, where geopolitical negotiations, tariff regimes, AI competition, elections, sovereign risk, macro narratives, and financial expectations are repriced in real time.
This transition has transformed prediction markets into always-on consensus infrastructure capable of absorbing information flows faster than traditional polling systems, legacy forecasting pipelines, institutional research desks, and many media narratives.
The modern prediction market stack increasingly behaves like a distributed probabilistic intelligence layer for global events rather than a niche speculative product category.
Market Metadata
- Market ID:
will-the-next-governing-coalition-of-new-zealand-include-labour-nzf - Snapshot Timestamp: May 17, 2026 at 10:09 AM
- Category Class: Implied Probabilisty
- Signal Type: binary outcome probability surface
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