Trader consensus on Polymarket reflects a closely contested market for the Bloomberg x Subdial Rolex Watch Index, with implied probabilities hovering near 50% for dipping to $12,100 or $12,050 by April 30 amid ongoing post-boom correction in secondary luxury watch pricing. Rolex retail prices rose 2-6% in January 2026—steel models up 3-7%, gold higher—yet secondary averages linger around $12,000-$13,000 USD (WatchCharts data as of April 7), with 65% of models trading below retail due to speculator exits, normalized dealer inventory, and softening Chinese demand after household wealth erosion. Recent stabilization (+1.2% over 30 days per Subdial) contrasts 1-month dips (-0.3%), driven by collector focus over flips; watch for end-month volatility from economic releases like U.S. luxury sales data.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated$23,551 Vol.
↑ $13,150
2%
↑ $12,650
2%
↑ $12,550
2%
↑ $12,450
2%
↑ $12,350
7%
↑ $12,300
11%
↑ $12,250
28%
↓ $12,100
56%
↓ $12,050
38%
↓ $11,950
6%
↓ $11,850
6%
↓ $11,750
2%
$23,551 Vol.
↑ $13,150
2%
↑ $12,650
2%
↑ $12,550
2%
↑ $12,450
2%
↑ $12,350
7%
↑ $12,300
11%
↑ $12,250
28%
↓ $12,100
56%
↓ $12,050
38%
↓ $11,950
6%
↓ $11,850
6%
↓ $11,750
2%
The resolution source for this market is Subdial — specifically, the Rolex Index chart available at https://subdial.com/market. The daily values in USD shown on the chart will be used for resolution.
This market refers to prices displayed in USD. To switch the display currency, use the currency toggle located at the left beneath the graph and select “USD” instead of “GBP”.
This market will resolve as soon as the price shown on the Bloomberg x Subdial Watch Index for Rolex chart reaches the listed price, or once the value for April 30, 2026, is published, and the listed price has not been reached. If no data for April 30, 2026, has been published by May 14, 2026, this market will resolve based on the data available at that time.
Revisions made to published data points on the Bloomberg x Subdial Watch Index for Rolex chart before the April 30, 2026 data point has been published will be considered; however, they will not disqualify a previously published data point from resolving this market. Revisions made after the April 30, 2026, data point has been finalized will not be considered.
Market Opened: Mar 16, 2026, 8:21 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The resolution source for this market is Subdial — specifically, the Rolex Index chart available at https://subdial.com/market. The daily values in USD shown on the chart will be used for resolution.
This market refers to prices displayed in USD. To switch the display currency, use the currency toggle located at the left beneath the graph and select “USD” instead of “GBP”.
This market will resolve as soon as the price shown on the Bloomberg x Subdial Watch Index for Rolex chart reaches the listed price, or once the value for April 30, 2026, is published, and the listed price has not been reached. If no data for April 30, 2026, has been published by May 14, 2026, this market will resolve based on the data available at that time.
Revisions made to published data points on the Bloomberg x Subdial Watch Index for Rolex chart before the April 30, 2026 data point has been published will be considered; however, they will not disqualify a previously published data point from resolving this market. Revisions made after the April 30, 2026, data point has been finalized will not be considered.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on Polymarket reflects a closely contested market for the Bloomberg x Subdial Rolex Watch Index, with implied probabilities hovering near 50% for dipping to $12,100 or $12,050 by April 30 amid ongoing post-boom correction in secondary luxury watch pricing. Rolex retail prices rose 2-6% in January 2026—steel models up 3-7%, gold higher—yet secondary averages linger around $12,000-$13,000 USD (WatchCharts data as of April 7), with 65% of models trading below retail due to speculator exits, normalized dealer inventory, and softening Chinese demand after household wealth erosion. Recent stabilization (+1.2% over 30 days per Subdial) contrasts 1-month dips (-0.3%), driven by collector focus over flips; watch for end-month volatility from economic releases like U.S. luxury sales data.
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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