Will the Denver Nuggets win the 2026 NBA Finals?
Will the Denver Nuggets win the 2026 NBA Finals?
Signal
NO TRADE
Probability
5%
Confidence
LOW
40%
Summary.
The Nuggets winning in 2026 is a long shot given the volatility of the NBA; I'm estimating a 5% chance, close to the market price of 6.5%, so I recommend no bet.
Reasoning.
The Nuggets winning in 2026 is a long shot given the volatility of the NBA; I'm estimating a 5% chance, close to the market price of 6.5%, so I recommend no bet.
Key Factors.
Uncertainty of player performance and team composition over 2 years
Potential for injuries to key players like Nikola Jokic
Changing landscape of the NBA with other teams improving
Risks.
Denver's continued dominance
Unexpected development of young players
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Related Analysis.
Will Blue Origin land on the moon before SpaceX?
My estimated probability is 73% that Blue Origin lands on the moon before SpaceX, compared to the market's implied probability of 69.5%. This represents a modest 3.5 percentage point edge favoring Blue Origin (YES). The key driver is Blue Origin's significant readiness advantage as of April 20, 2026: their MK1 lander completed thermal vacuum testing in February, is currently in final integration in Florida, and targets a late 2026 launch on New Glenn—a single-launch architecture requiring no orbital refueling. In contrast, SpaceX's Starship HLS requires an unprecedented orbital propellant depot and 10+ tanker flights for cryogenic transfer, a technology not yet demonstrated as of today. Leaked internal documents target June 2027 for SpaceX's lunar landing, giving Blue Origin a 6-9 month timeline advantage. While New Glenn has limited flight heritage (only 3 flights, though it just achieved first booster reuse on April 19), and the BE-7 engine is unproven in space, the architectural complexity differential heavily favors Blue Origin. The market appears to slightly overweight SpaceX's historical execution velocity while undervaluing the technical risk of first-of-kind orbital cryogenic propellant transfer at scale and Blue Origin's tangible hardware readiness.
Will Blue Origin land on the moon before SpaceX?
The estimated probability of Blue Origin landing on the moon first is 72%, compared to the market's implied probability of 69.5%, representing a modest 2.5 percentage point edge. This assessment is grounded in Blue Origin's significant architectural advantage: the Blue Moon MK1 requires a single New Glenn launch using proven technology, while SpaceX's Starship approach requires approximately 11 launches with unprecedented orbital cryogenic refueling never demonstrated at operational scale. As of April 21, 2026, Blue Origin's MK1 lander is already in thermal vacuum testing at NASA JSC with a late 2026/early 2027 launch target, while SpaceX's internal schedule (leaked November 2025) targets June 2027 for lunar landing—a timeline considered optimistic given the company lost three Ship upper stages in 2025 due to thermal protection issues and has yet to demonstrate the critical refueling technology. However, two significant uncertainties temper confidence: New Glenn's upper-stage anomaly during the April 19, 2026 NG-3 mission (just two days ago) raises concerns about near-term launch readiness, and SpaceX has historically achieved breakthroughs when focused on specific technical challenges. The market appears reasonably efficient and well-calibrated given publicly available information, with the small edge potentially reflecting incomplete pricing of the very recent New Glenn anomaly.
Will Blue Origin land on the moon before SpaceX?
The market implies a 68.5% probability that Blue Origin's MK1 lander reaches the moon before SpaceX's Starship, which aligns closely with my estimated 68% probability. Blue Origin holds a commanding 12-month timeline advantage (Q3 2026 target versus SpaceX's June 2027 internal schedule) and a vastly simpler single-launch architecture compared to SpaceX's unproven orbital refueling system requiring 10-15 tanker flights. However, this advantage is substantially offset by debut hardware risk: New Glenn has only two flights (with the April 19, 2026 flight deploying payload to incorrect orbit), MK1 is a completely untested lander, and historical first-time lunar landing attempts fail 50-60% of the time. The market appears efficient, having appropriately priced Blue Origin's architectural and timeline superiority against significant technical execution risk. With MK1 having just completed thermal vacuum testing on April 9 and Blue Origin publicly confirming a Q3 2026 target three days ago, the near-term timeline advantage is real, but the compounded risk of debut rocket plus debut lander on humanity's technically challenging lunar surface creates legitimate uncertainty that the current 68.5% odds correctly reflect.