WTI crude oil—the West Texas Intermediate benchmark anchoring global energy prices—faces multiple critical price thresholds in April. This event aggregates seven prediction markets that collectively track whether WTI will breach specific price levels: a downside scenario at $70, mid-range targets at $120, $125, and $130, and an upside scenario at $200. These markets function as mechanisms for price discovery and sentiment aggregation, allowing traders, analysts, and market observers to express expectations about oil market dynamics shaped by supply conditions, geopolitical developments, demand trends, and macroeconomic fundamentals. By examining the probability distribution across these seven price targets, you can understand how the prediction market consensus views April's likely price range and the relative tail risks on both sides. A rising probability for the $70 scenario suggests apprehension about demand weakness or supply abundance, while convergent probabilities around $120–$130 indicate expectations of equilibrium pricing. Significantly elevated odds for $200 would signal market concern about material supply disruptions or geopolitical escalation. The aggregation of these seven markets reveals the full landscape of price expectations. Rather than treating any single market in isolation, comparing probabilities across the entire range provides insight into market volatility perceptions, conviction levels around different scenarios, and the consensus price band that participants expect WTI to trade within during April.