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This paper investigates prediction markets not just as forecasting tools, but as coordination mechanisms that influence actors like voters and journalists. It finds that the "social force" of a market signal depends on its persistence, trader diversity, and cross-platform consensus, not just its size. The authors introduce a Signal Credibility Index (SCI) to predict when price movements gain behavioral traction, revealing a decoupling of social authority from epistemic accuracy in the 2024 US presidential election.
Prediction markets don't just predict the future, they shape it, and the most visible market isn't always the most accurate.
Prediction markets are widely treated as forecasting devices that reveal collective expectations about uncertain futures. This article argues that under specifiable conditions they also function as coordination mechanisms: public probabilities that organize the behavior of voters, donors, journalists, traders, and institutions in ways that can be self-fulfilling or self-defeating. Most existing work asks whether prediction markets forecast accurately; this paper asks whether accurate forecasting is even the right criterion for a market that has become a public coordination device. Drawing on transaction-level evidence from the 2024 U.S. presidential election, we show that the social force of a market signal depends less on its size than on its persistence, the breadth of responding trader types, and cross-platform consensus. We introduce a Signal Credibility Index (SCI) -- combining the variance ratio VR(6), a two-sidedness diagnostic, and a trader-concentration adjustment -- as a microstructure-grounded criterion for predicting when price moves acquire behavioral traction. Applied to three major 2024 political shocks, the framework reveals that superficially similar events generated qualitatively distinct signal types with different implications for elite coordination. A cross-platform comparison establishes a systematic decoupling of social authority from epistemic robustness: the most visible market produced the least accurate forecasts. The framework carries direct implications for regulating prediction markets as democratic information infrastructure.