KPI prediction markets let you forecast key performance indicators for leading technology and industrial companies. These markets track concrete, measurable metrics—from quarterly delivery numbers and revenue targets to user growth milestones. Traders participate by buying and selling contracts tied to whether specific outcomes will occur. Common KPI markets focus on metrics that shape investor decisions: Will Tesla deliver over 300,000 vehicles next quarter? Will Google's Gemini reach 800 million monthly active users? Will Nvidia's data center revenue exceed $65 billion? These outcomes are publicly disclosed by companies themselves, making them objective and verifiable. KPI prices reflect collective expectations about company performance. Several factors influence how prices move. Earnings calls and management guidance directly impact sentiment—optimistic forward-looking statements can shift probabilities significantly. Market conditions and investor appetite for specific sectors (tech valuations, chip demand, EV adoption) also matter. Competitive announcements and new product launches reshape expectations for a company's execution ability. Regulatory developments, macroeconomic conditions like interest rates or supply chain constraints, and industry disruption all propagate through these markets. Traders use KPI markets to test hypotheses about company execution. Are current valuations pricing in realistic growth? Will announced cost-cutting initiatives achieve their targets? Has consensus overlooked a competitive threat or opportunity? The live order book reflects what markets truly believe—often diverging sharply from analyst consensus or media narratives.