Ted Hisokawa
Jul 15, 2026 14:27
On Tuesday, Fed Chair Kevin Warsh faced the Senate Banking Committee after testifying to the House a day earlier, reiterating his inflation focus but offering few policy clues.
Polymarket Reprices the September 2026 Fed Decision After Chair Kevin Warsh’s Senate Testimony
On Polymarket’s “Fed Decision in September?” ladder, “No change” is the leading outcome at 61.5% (up 1.0 pp) on $2.92M matched. Traders are repricing around Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s Capitol Hill testimony, with the ladder showing where conviction concentrates across hike/cut paths.
Key Takeaways
- Polymarket currently prices “No change” after the September 2026 Fed meeting at 61.5% (Yes 61.5% / No 38.5%), ahead of a 25 bps increase at 32.5%.
- Warsh’s Senate Banking Committee testimony is the near-term catalyst, while the market’s small +1.0 pp move suggests traders mostly kept the base case intact rather than flipping to a hike or cut.
- The contract resolves off the September 2026 Fed meeting outcome, with a listed resolution date of 2026-09-16; recent tape shows choppy positioning despite only moderate momentum.
Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh testified before the Senate Banking Committee, facing questions on the economy and how different factors could affect interest rates. The appearance follows testimony to the House Financial Services Committee a day earlier, where he reiterated a commitment to fighting inflation but offered few specific signals on the direction of monetary policy.
Strike Ladder Snapshot: “No Change” 61.5% on $2.92M Matched vs 25 bps Hike at 32.5%
This is a price-ladder market: each row is its own Yes/No contract on a specific September-meeting outcome, not a single “settles at” level. The current ladder centers on policy hold risk: “No change” trades Yes 61.5% / No 38.5%, while “25 bps increase” sits at Yes 32.5% / No 67.5%, and cuts are priced as long shots (“25 bps decrease” Yes 3.9% / No 96.1%; “50+ bps decrease” Yes 2.1% / No 97.9%), with a large hike even smaller (“50+ bps increase” Yes 0.6% / No 99.4%). Despite “No change” ticking up 1.0 pp to 61.5% on $2.92M matched, the historical summary flags moderate volatility with reversal_detected=true and a weakening consensus, consistent with traders fading sharp moves rather than building a one-way view. The same summary shows change_24h = -5.0 pp and change_7d = -5.0 pp even as the broader trend is labeled bullish, a mix that points to a market that is still pricing the hold as the modal outcome but with meaningful disagreement about whether the surprise risk skews toward a hike (32.5%) rather than a cut (combined 6.0%).
Watch whether subsequent trading shifts probability mass between “No change” (61.5%) and “25 bps increase” (32.5%) ahead of the 2026-09-16 resolution date, since the recent reversal signal implies the ladder can swing quickly on new Fed communication.
What Traders Watch Next on Polymarket: Linking the Fed Ladder to CPI, Recession, and BTC Rate-Sensitivity Contracts
After you’ve mapped where this September ladder’s pricing sits, the next step is scanning adjacent Polymarket boards to see whether traders are expressing the same rates view elsewhere or hedging it in different ways. On “Fed Decision in July?”, “No change” leads at 95.05% on $62,766,451 matched, while “How many Fed rate cuts in 2026?” has “0 (0 bps)” at 80.75% with $42,471,928 in volume—two high-liquidity reads on how sticky the platform thinks policy will be. For a contrast check on how attention rotates beyond macro, “Ballon d’Or Winner 2026” shows Harry Kane leading at 46.85% on $7,411,381 matched.
Odds Trend
| Window | Change (pp) |
|---|---|
| 24h | -5.0 |
| 7d | -5.0 |
By the Numbers
- Platform: Polymarket
- Market: Fed Decision in September?
- 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: Sep 16, 2026 (UTC)
- Status: Active (open for trading)
- Volume: ~$2,919,232
Top strike rungs
| Strike | Yes | No |
|---|---|---|
| No change | 61.5% | 38.5% |
| 25 bps increase | 32.5% | 67.5% |
| 25 bps decrease | 3.9% | 96.1% |
| 50+ bps decrease | 2.1% | 97.9% |
+1 more strikes not shown
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Image source: Shutterstock





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