Intense negotiations between the WNBA and WNBPA, spanning 17 months and including a missed March 10 deadline, drove recent trader sentiment around a potential new collective bargaining agreement. Marathon sessions in mid-March produced a verbal agreement, followed by a tentative seven-year deal ratified by the Board of Governors on March 24, featuring the league’s first revenue-sharing model at 20% of shared basketball revenue and a 2026 salary cap starting at $7 million. Player milestones such as minimum salaries near $300,000 and supermax contracts at $1.4 million, alongside a new $3.1 billion media rights package, shaped the final terms that enabled the 2026 season to open on schedule without work stoppage.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedNew WNBA CBA agreement by...?
$18,425 Vol.
June 30
97%
$18,425 Vol.
June 30
97%
For purposes of this market, a CBA is considered ‘executed’ only when the final written agreement has been formally signed by authorized representatives of both the WNBA and the WNBA Players Association. Tentative agreements, ratifications, or agreements pending signature do not qualify.
The resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Jan 8, 2026, 2:09 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...For purposes of this market, a CBA is considered ‘executed’ only when the final written agreement has been formally signed by authorized representatives of both the WNBA and the WNBA Players Association. Tentative agreements, ratifications, or agreements pending signature do not qualify.
The resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Intense negotiations between the WNBA and WNBPA, spanning 17 months and including a missed March 10 deadline, drove recent trader sentiment around a potential new collective bargaining agreement. Marathon sessions in mid-March produced a verbal agreement, followed by a tentative seven-year deal ratified by the Board of Governors on March 24, featuring the league’s first revenue-sharing model at 20% of shared basketball revenue and a 2026 salary cap starting at $7 million. Player milestones such as minimum salaries near $300,000 and supermax contracts at $1.4 million, alongside a new $3.1 billion media rights package, shaped the final terms that enabled the 2026 season to open on schedule without work stoppage.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated



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