Polymarket traders see 79% chance Fed will not cut rates this year

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The crowd has spoken, and it’s not what rate-cut hopefuls wanted to hear. Polymarket traders are now pricing in a 79% probability that the Federal Reserve will deliver exactly zero interest rate cuts in 2026, a stark contrast to the optimism that prevailed just a few months ago.

The dedicated prediction market, titled “How many Fed rate cuts in 2026?,” has attracted over $40.8 million in trading volume.

From hope to hawkish reality

In mid-April, Polymarket traders gave only a 43% chance that the Fed would hold rates flat through the year. By late April, that figure had climbed to 58%. Now it’s sitting near 79%, and the trend line looks like a one-way escalator.

The shift didn’t happen in a vacuum. May’s inflation reading came in at 4.1%, a number that effectively killed any remaining dovish fantasies.

Then came the June 17 FOMC meeting, the first under new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh. The committee voted to hold rates steady. But the updated dot-plot projections told a more aggressive story: all cutting expectations for 2026 were removed entirely.

As of June 26, the breakdown on Polymarket showed the “0 cuts” outcome trading at 79.25%, with “1 cut” at just 12.5% and “2 cuts” at a meager 3.45%. Since early July, the zero-cuts outcome has hovered steadily between 77.6% and 78%. The market resolves on December 31, 2026.

Why Polymarket matters as a signal

Polymarket’s resolution criteria for this particular market are straightforward. It tracks the exact number of 25-basis-point cuts announced via official FOMC statements, including any emergency moves.

The platform’s participant base skews heavily toward the digital asset sector. These aren’t casual observers of monetary policy. They’re traders who understand, often painfully, how interest rate movements ripple through every corner of financial markets, especially crypto.

What this means for crypto and broader markets

The broader implication is that inflationary pressures remain stubborn enough to keep the Fed on the sidelines. A 4.1% inflation reading in May isn’t catastrophic, but it’s well above the Fed’s 2% target. Some traders on Polymarket are even speculating about a potential tightening path rather than cuts.

Kevin Warsh’s first major policy meeting set a clear tone for his tenure. Whether that tone holds through the remaining FOMC meetings this year will determine if $40.8 million worth of Polymarket bets end up looking prescient or premature.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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