Crude oil price movements carry significant implications for energy markets, transportation costs, and global economic conditions. As markets prepare for mid-year, participants are assessing where crude oil may trade by the end of June 2026. This event aggregates five prediction markets that span a wide range of price outcomes, from conservative bearish scenarios to ambitious bullish targets. The grouped markets here cover crude oil (CL) reaching specific price thresholds: $200, $175, and $150 on the high end, alongside $80 and $35 on the low end. Together, these represent a spectrum of potential price movements and allow you to build a comprehensive view of market expectations across different scenarios. Rather than predicting a single price, these markets let you examine how the broader market distributes probability across multiple outcomes. When reviewing prices on these markets, you're seeing the collective judgment of thousands of participants weighing geopolitical tensions, supply constraints, demand forecasts, and macroeconomic momentum. Higher prices on a specific threshold typically indicate greater market conviction that crude oil will reach that level. Lower prices suggest skepticism about that particular scenario. By examining the full range—from the $35 floor to the $200 ceiling—you gain insight into both the tail risks and consensus expectations the market is pricing in. These markets are particularly valuable for understanding uncertainty bands. If $150 is priced highly but $175 is low, the market is signaling confidence in a moderate rally but skepticism about a dramatic spike. Conversely, strong signals across multiple thresholds might indicate genuine conviction about directional movement. Whether you're tracking energy price trends for investment, operational, or research purposes, this aggregated view provides a focused window into how prediction market participants assess crude oil's trajectory over the coming weeks.