Trader consensus on Polymarket reflects a strong 90.5% implied probability of no change in the federal funds rate at the June 2026 FOMC meeting, anchored at the current 3.50–3.75% target range, driven by hotter-than-expected March CPI inflation surging to 3.3% annually—up from 2.4% in February amid a record energy price spike—and solid March nonfarm payrolls adding 178,000 jobs with unemployment easing to 4.3%. Fed Chair Powell's March 18 remarks emphasized policy remaining appropriate amid persistent inflation pressures, aligning with the dot plot's single 2026 cut projected later in the year. Upcoming April FOMC on April 29 and May economic releases, including CPI on May 12, could challenge this if data softens markedly toward recession signals or deflationary trends.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedFed Decision in June?
Fed Decision in June?
No change 91%
25 bps decrease 8%
25 bps increase 1.6%
50+ bps decrease <1%
$6,623,829 Vol.
$6,623,829 Vol.
50+ bps decrease
1%
25 bps decrease
8%
No change
91%
25 bps increase
2%
50+ bps increase
1%
No change 91%
25 bps decrease 8%
25 bps increase 1.6%
50+ bps decrease <1%
$6,623,829 Vol.
$6,623,829 Vol.
50+ bps decrease
1%
25 bps decrease
8%
No change
91%
25 bps increase
2%
50+ bps increase
1%
This market will resolve to the amount of basis points the upper bound of the target federal funds rate is changed by versus the level it was prior to the Federal Reserve's June 2026 meeting.
If the target federal funds rate is changed to a level not expressed in the displayed options, the change will be rounded up to the nearest 25 and will resolve to the relevant bracket. (e.g. if there's a cut/increase of 12.5 bps it will be considered to be 25 bps)
The resolution source for this market is the FOMC’s statement after its meeting scheduled for June 16-17, 2026 according to the official calendar: https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/fomccalendars.htm.
The level and change of the target federal funds rate is also published at the official website of the Federal Reserve at https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/openmarket.htm.
This market may resolve as soon as the FOMC’s statement for their June meeting with relevant data is issued. If no statement is released by the end date of the next scheduled meeting, this market will resolve to the "No change" bracket.
Market Opened: Dec 10, 2025, 4:37 PM ET
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...This market will resolve to the amount of basis points the upper bound of the target federal funds rate is changed by versus the level it was prior to the Federal Reserve's June 2026 meeting.
If the target federal funds rate is changed to a level not expressed in the displayed options, the change will be rounded up to the nearest 25 and will resolve to the relevant bracket. (e.g. if there's a cut/increase of 12.5 bps it will be considered to be 25 bps)
The resolution source for this market is the FOMC’s statement after its meeting scheduled for June 16-17, 2026 according to the official calendar: https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/fomccalendars.htm.
The level and change of the target federal funds rate is also published at the official website of the Federal Reserve at https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/openmarket.htm.
This market may resolve as soon as the FOMC’s statement for their June meeting with relevant data is issued. If no statement is released by the end date of the next scheduled meeting, this market will resolve to the "No change" bracket.
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...Trader consensus on Polymarket reflects a strong 90.5% implied probability of no change in the federal funds rate at the June 2026 FOMC meeting, anchored at the current 3.50–3.75% target range, driven by hotter-than-expected March CPI inflation surging to 3.3% annually—up from 2.4% in February amid a record energy price spike—and solid March nonfarm payrolls adding 178,000 jobs with unemployment easing to 4.3%. Fed Chair Powell's March 18 remarks emphasized policy remaining appropriate amid persistent inflation pressures, aligning with the dot plot's single 2026 cut projected later in the year. Upcoming April FOMC on April 29 and May economic releases, including CPI on May 12, could challenge this if data softens markedly toward recession signals or deflationary trends.
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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