Polymarket traders are pricing a 55% implied probability of a Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) rate hike at the June 18 meeting, driven primarily by sticky underlying inflation metrics that remain above the 2-3% target band. April CPI data showed headline inflation easing to 3.6% year-over-year from 3.8%, but trimmed mean inflation held steady at 4.0%, fueling hawkish sentiment amid a robust labor market with unemployment at a low 4.1% and strong job growth. No-change odds at 45% reflect some softening in headline pressures and anticipated global easing from the Fed, while a rate cut at just 3.1% appears negligible given resilient economic momentum; trader consensus hinges on upcoming Q2 inflation indicators and RBA rhetoric for resolution.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedNo Change 52%
Increase 48%
Decrease 3.1%
Decrease
3%
No Change
52%
Increase
48%
No Change 52%
Increase 48%
Decrease 3.1%
Decrease
3%
No Change
52%
Increase
48%
The resolution source for this market is information released by the Reserve Bank of Australia after its June 16, 2026 meeting, as listed on the official Reserve Bank of Australia calendar: https://www.rba.gov.au/schedules-events/board-meeting-schedules.html
This market may resolve as soon as the Reserve Bank of Australia's media release for their June 16, 2026 meeting with relevant data is issued. If no decision on the target for the cash rate is issued by the end date of the next scheduled meeting, this market will resolve to the "No Change" bracket.
Market Opened: Mar 19, 2026, 7:28 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Polymarket traders are pricing a 55% implied probability of a Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) rate hike at the June 18 meeting, driven primarily by sticky underlying inflation metrics that remain above the 2-3% target band. April CPI data showed headline inflation easing to 3.6% year-over-year from 3.8%, but trimmed mean inflation held steady at 4.0%, fueling hawkish sentiment amid a robust labor market with unemployment at a low 4.1% and strong job growth. No-change odds at 45% reflect some softening in headline pressures and anticipated global easing from the Fed, while a rate cut at just 3.1% appears negligible given resilient economic momentum; trader consensus hinges on upcoming Q2 inflation indicators and RBA rhetoric for resolution.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated
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