Joerg Hiller
Jul 14, 2026 02:26
Ahead of US CPI, FX desks described the yen as consolidating while dollar bulls waited on inflation data and Fed-linked headlines.
Polymarket Reprices July 2026 Fed “No Change” Odds After US CPI + Fed Commentary Catalyst
Polymarket traders are pricing the July Fed decision as a 65.5% chance of “No change,” down from 71.5% previously on the same contract, with $52.96M in volume. The move comes as FX desks focus on US CPI and Fed-related headlines, and the market’s ladder pricing shows where uncertainty is concentrating.
Key Takeaways
- Polymarket’s leading outcome is “No change” at 65.5% implied odds (Yes 65.5% / No 34.5%).
- The catalyst is renewed attention on US CPI and Fed commentary; pricing softened as “No change” fell 6.0 points (71.5% to 65.5%) while “25 bps increase” sits at 34.45%.
- This market resolves on 2026-07-29, and the last 24h and 7d both show a -10.0 point move with reversal_detected=true.
A market update framed the Japanese yen as consolidating while USD bulls look ahead to US CPI, with attention also on Federal Reserve-related commentary (including references to Warsh). The focus was on near-term macro catalysts and how FX traders are positioning into upcoming US inflation data.
Market Reaction: $52.96M Volume as “No Change” Drops to 65.5% and “25 bps Increase” Rises to 34.45% on the Strike Ladder
This is a price-ladder market: each row is a separate binary on the July 2026 decision, so “Yes” is the chance that specific outcome happens at the meeting rather than a single shared settlement price. The top line remains “No change” at Yes 65.5% / No 34.5%, but the contract has repriced lower versus the prior 71.5% reading, pushing relatively more probability into the alternative outcomes led by “25 bps increase” at Yes 34.45% / No 65.55%. The tails are still being treated as long shots: “50+ bps increase” is Yes 0.75% / No 99.25%, while “25 bps decrease” is Yes 0.45% / No 99.55%. The historical summary flags high volatility and weakening consensus, with both 24h and 7d changes at -10.0 points and reversal_detected=true—consistent with traders updating continuously as macro catalysts approach rather than waiting for slower narrative confirmation. With $52.96M matched, the key read is not that cuts are gaining traction (they are still sub-1%), but that the market is shifting from strong confidence in a hold toward a more two-sided hold-vs-hike distribution into the July window.
Watch whether “No change” stabilizes back above its recent average (avg_last_5: 76.7) or continues to leak probability into the 25 bps hike line; any further swings should be judged against the contract’s high-volatility regime and the 2026-07-29 resolution date.
What Traders Watch Next on Polymarket: CPI Prints, Fed Path Contracts, and Cross-Macro Rates Bets Into 2026-07-29
Beyond this contract, Polymarket’s macro board stays busy with traders triangulating the broader policy path across adjacent lines and timelines. “How many Fed rate cuts in 2026?” leads with 80.15% on “0 (0 bps)” on $42.14M in volume, while “Fed rate hike in 2026?” sits at 71.5% Yes with $3.95M matched—two ways the platform is expressing a higher-for-longer baseline. For nearer sequencing, “Fed Decision in September?” prices a 53.0% chance of a 25 bps increase ($2.45M), and outside rates altogether, attention also spills into liquid event markets like “Ballon d’Or Winner 2026,” where Kylian Mbappé leads at 33.5% on $7.08M.
Odds Trend
| Window | Change (pp) |
|---|---|
| 24h | -10.0 |
| 7d | -10.0 |
By the Numbers
- Platform: Polymarket
- Market: Fed Decision in July?
- Contract type: Price strike ladder: each rung has separate Yes/No; Yes means the spot price is above that USD strike at settlement.
- Resolution window: Jul 29, 2026 (UTC)
- Status: Active (open for trading)
- Volume: ~$52,964,056
Top strike rungs
| Strike | Yes | No |
|---|---|---|
| No change | 65.5% | 34.5% |
| 25 bps increase | 34.5% | 65.5% |
| 50+ bps increase | 0.8% | 99.2% |
| 25 bps decrease | 0.5% | 99.5% |
+1 more strikes not shown
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Image source: Shutterstock





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