China-related prediction markets provide real-time forecasts on major geopolitical events, diplomatic developments, and economic outcomes that shape regional and global dynamics. Whether you're tracking potential military escalation in the Taiwan Strait, monitoring diplomatic relations, or assessing impacts from policy changes, these markets aggregate perspectives from thousands of informed participants worldwide. Common events forecasted include military scenarios (e.g., "Will China invade Taiwan by end of 2026?"), regional stability indicators like Strait of Hormuz disruptions, leadership visit scenarios ("Will Trump visit China by April 30?"), and broader shifts in international relations. Each market's price represents a real-time probability estimate: $0.80 suggests an 80% likelihood; $0.20 reflects lower perceived probability. What drives prices in these markets? Key factors include official announcements and policy declarations, military activity and defense posture changes, economic indicators like trade data and sanctions, diplomatic engagement and summit announcements, and major news developments. Prices fluctuate continuously as new information emerges. Participants who correctly anticipate developments can gain early positioning before mainstream consensus shifts. Markets close when outcomes resolve, with correct predictions receiving final payouts. These markets help journalists, analysts, policymakers, and informed observers understand collective predictions about consequential events. They work best when they attract diverse viewpoints, experience, and information sources—resulting in efficient price discovery that reflects available knowledge.