Trader sentiment on peak 2026 inflation hinges on sticky core measures amid resilient economic growth, with February 2026 CPI holding at 2.4% year-over-year—unchanged from January—while core CPI remained at 2.5%, running hotter at 3.0% annualized over three months. The Federal Reserve's March 18 FOMC projections raised median PCE inflation to 2.7% for 2026 (from 2.4% prior) and core PCE to 2.7%, reflecting persistent services inflation and oil price volatility from Middle East tensions, though officials anticipate easing to 2.2% in 2027. January core PCE hit 3.1%, underscoring upside risks. Key catalysts include March CPI on April 10 and February PCE data this week, alongside April 29-30 FOMC for rate path updates. Markets price modest policy easing, balancing labor strength against inflation's path to 2%.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$365,593 Vol.
Above 3%
98%
Above 3.5%
84%
Above 4%
50%
Above 5%
25%
Above 6%
12%
Above 8%
9%
Above 10%
7%
$365,593 Vol.
Above 3%
98%
Above 3.5%
84%
Above 4%
50%
Above 5%
25%
Above 6%
12%
Above 8%
9%
Above 10%
7%
The resolution source for this market will be the BLS Consumer Price Index reports released for each month of 2026 (https://www.bls.gov/bls/news-release/cpi.htm). Resolution of this market will take place upon release of the aforementioned data.
This market may not resolve to "No" until the December 2026 report is issued. Once the December 2026 report is issued, any revisions to previously released CPI figures will not be counted toward this market's resolution. If the CPI report for December 2026 is not issued by January 31, 2027, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve based on CPI figures which have already been made available by the BLS.
Note: the resolution source for this market will be the official monthly BLS CPI news release which reports inflation over 12 month periods to only one decimal point (e.g. 2.9%). Thus, this is the level of precision that will be used when resolving the market.
Market Opened: Nov 13, 2025, 4:31 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The resolution source for this market will be the BLS Consumer Price Index reports released for each month of 2026 (https://www.bls.gov/bls/news-release/cpi.htm). Resolution of this market will take place upon release of the aforementioned data.
This market may not resolve to "No" until the December 2026 report is issued. Once the December 2026 report is issued, any revisions to previously released CPI figures will not be counted toward this market's resolution. If the CPI report for December 2026 is not issued by January 31, 2027, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve based on CPI figures which have already been made available by the BLS.
Note: the resolution source for this market will be the official monthly BLS CPI news release which reports inflation over 12 month periods to only one decimal point (e.g. 2.9%). Thus, this is the level of precision that will be used when resolving the market.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader sentiment on peak 2026 inflation hinges on sticky core measures amid resilient economic growth, with February 2026 CPI holding at 2.4% year-over-year—unchanged from January—while core CPI remained at 2.5%, running hotter at 3.0% annualized over three months. The Federal Reserve's March 18 FOMC projections raised median PCE inflation to 2.7% for 2026 (from 2.4% prior) and core PCE to 2.7%, reflecting persistent services inflation and oil price volatility from Middle East tensions, though officials anticipate easing to 2.2% in 2027. January core PCE hit 3.1%, underscoring upside risks. Key catalysts include March CPI on April 10 and February PCE data this week, alongside April 29-30 FOMC for rate path updates. Markets price modest policy easing, balancing labor strength against inflation's path to 2%.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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