Market A asks whether Bitcoin will breach $150,000 at any point during May, representing an approximately 184% increase from typical mid-May spot prices (assuming a baseline near $51,500). Market B asks whether Bitcoin will dip to $45,000 during the same month, representing a roughly 12% decline from similar baseline assumptions. These markets frame two opposite extremes of Bitcoin's possible May trading range—one capturing bullish breakout momentum, the other bearish capitulation. Notably, both markets currently show 0% YES probability, suggesting that traders collectively assign minimal likelihood to either extreme occurring within a single calendar month. The stark contrast in these probability assessments reveals something important about market conviction. Neither extreme—neither the $150K euphoria nor the $45K panic—commands any meaningful trader backing at present. This 'no consensus on extremes' pattern is typical in prediction markets: traders may believe Bitcoin will move, but they express that view through directional markets rather than through exaggerated price targets. The $105,000 gap between the two markets' boundaries illustrates the perceived volatility zone that Bitcoin could theoretically traverse. For a reader assessing market sentiment, the zero-probability readings on both extremes suggest that mainstream expectations cluster somewhere between these bounds—neither wildly optimistic nor catastrophically pessimistic. These two markets can only both resolve YES if Bitcoin simultaneously reaches both $150,000 and $45,000 in the same month—a scenario that would require extraordinary intra-month swings and is implicitly priced as near-impossible by the current 0% readings. More realistically, outcomes will diverge: either Bitcoin trends upward (benefiting Market A) or trends downward (benefiting Market B), or trades sideways (benefiting neither). However, a sideways outcome doesn't preclude brief wicks into either extreme; a sudden flash-crash to $45K or a brief spike to $150K could theoretically occur even in a trendless market. Conversely, sustained directional movement in either direction makes the corresponding extreme much more probable as it unfolds through May. Several factors will drive these probabilities upward or downward during May: macroeconomic data (U.S. inflation reports, Fed signals) can trigger volatility; Bitcoin futures open interest and liquidation levels indicate where price pressure could accelerate; major news events (regulatory announcements, corporate adoption news) can shift conviction rapidly. Traders watching these markets should also monitor Bitcoin's current range and implied volatility metrics—higher historical volatility increases the statistical likelihood of extreme moves. Additionally, correlation with traditional markets (equities, bonds) can amplify or dampen Bitcoin's directional bias. By tracking both markets simultaneously, readers gain a clear window into whether the crowd expects Bitcoin's May journey to be tame or turbulent, and whether any panic or euphoria scenarios are gaining traction.