There is a type of weather in Los Angeles that is basically printing money on Polymarket.


It's called the marine layer.
Every morning, a cool layer of fog rolls in from the coast and spreads out.
By noon, it quietly dissipates, taking the day's highest temperature down with it.
This cooling method is often unpredictable for most weather forecasts.
You can trade this temperature difference precisely on Polymarket.
A nationwide weather model treats Los Angeles the same as other cities, nothing special.
But locals know that the way this fog dissipates each time is different.
The deviation between the model and the real weather is a trading opportunity.
One thing no one explicitly says in the weather markets:
You're not competing against Wall Street.
You're betting against a generic forecast that doesn't understand your city at all.
A trader who can read Los Angeles' fog can outperform algorithms in data centers.
Someone made $1.11 million on a London weather bet with only an 8% pricing margin.
Another person turned $2,300 into $18,500 by focusing only on New York and London.
It's not because their models are better, but because they understand a place better than the market does.
The advantage isn't predicting the weather everywhere, but knowing a city's temperament better than the nationwide forecast.
Pick a place you're most familiar with.
The marine fog, the wind from the lake, the old town that’s several degrees warmer than the city forecast—these local insights are more valuable than any algorithm.
What strange weather quirks does your city have that the forecast always gets wrong?
#Polymarket
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