Planning fights about "Garden Office Planning: Neighbour Bets vs Rules" thrive on certainty nobody has. Markets will not read your deeds, but they can flag when a policy rumour is consensus or fringe.
Why local rumours feel absolute
Anecdotes scale badly; sample sizes of one dominate. Markets imperfectly aggregate people following the actual agenda — useful when your street is screaming.
Not legal advice
You still read the letter. You still check the portal. Markets tell you if informed people think a rule change sticks — not whether your fence is compliant.
- →Screenshot council notices.
- →If the market and the planning portal diverge, trust the portal.
- →Use markets to time questions to councillors, not to sue neighbours.
Democracy is slow on purpose — markets are just one early-warning layer.
When to engage, when to wait
For "Garden Office Planning: Neighbour Bets vs Rules", watch how prices move around committee dates — that rhythm beats panic threads. Boromarket surfaces similar patterns on bigger news too.
"The goal is not certainty. It is a better map of uncertainty than panic headlines give you."
— Boromarket