Polymarket trader consensus assigns a 32.8% implied probability to a 3.75% federal funds rate at 2026 year-end, edging out 3.5% at 25.0%, driven by the Federal Reserve's hawkish March 18 FOMC decision to hold the target range steady at 3.5%-3.75% for a second meeting. The updated dot plot signals just one 25 basis point cut for the year, reflecting upward revisions to 2026 core PCE inflation at 2.7% and steady unemployment projections near 4.4%, amid hotter February producer prices and oil shocks from geopolitical tensions. This tight contest hinges on inflation trajectory versus labor resilience, with April CPI data and the May FOMC meeting as pivotal swing factors.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated3.75% 32.8%
3.5% 25%
3.25% 14%
4.0% 10.8%
$4,905,391 Vol.
$4,905,391 Vol.
≤1.0%
1%
1.25
1%
1.5%
<1%
1.75%
<1%
2.0%
1%
2.25%
1%
2.5%
1%
2.75%
6%
3.0%
5%
3.25%
14%
3.5%
25%
3.75%
33%
4.0%
11%
4.25%
2%
≥ 4.5%
3%
3.75% 32.8%
3.5% 25%
3.25% 14%
4.0% 10.8%
$4,905,391 Vol.
$4,905,391 Vol.
≤1.0%
1%
1.25
1%
1.5%
<1%
1.75%
<1%
2.0%
1%
2.25%
1%
2.5%
1%
2.75%
6%
3.0%
5%
3.25%
14%
3.5%
25%
3.75%
33%
4.0%
11%
4.25%
2%
≥ 4.5%
3%
This market will resolve according to the upper bound of the Federal Reserve’s target federal funds range after the December 2026 Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, currently scheduled for December 8-9, 2026.
This market may resolve immediately after the statement for the FOMC’s December meeting, with relevant information about the FOMC’s decision on the target federal funds range, has been issued. If no FOMC decision on the target federal funds range for their December meeting has been issued by December 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve according to the upper bound of the target federal funds range at that time.
The upper bound of the target federal funds range will be rounded to the nearest 25 basis points for resolution of this market. If the upper bound of the target federal funds range falls exactly between two listed options, it will be rounded away from zero (e.g. if the upper bound is 2.875, with listed options of 3.0 & 2.75, this market will resolve to 3.0).
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from the Federal Reserve (https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/openmarket.htm).
Market Opened: Jan 12, 2026, 12:43 PM ET
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...This market will resolve according to the upper bound of the Federal Reserve’s target federal funds range after the December 2026 Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, currently scheduled for December 8-9, 2026.
This market may resolve immediately after the statement for the FOMC’s December meeting, with relevant information about the FOMC’s decision on the target federal funds range, has been issued. If no FOMC decision on the target federal funds range for their December meeting has been issued by December 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve according to the upper bound of the target federal funds range at that time.
The upper bound of the target federal funds range will be rounded to the nearest 25 basis points for resolution of this market. If the upper bound of the target federal funds range falls exactly between two listed options, it will be rounded away from zero (e.g. if the upper bound is 2.875, with listed options of 3.0 & 2.75, this market will resolve to 3.0).
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from the Federal Reserve (https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/openmarket.htm).
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...Polymarket trader consensus assigns a 32.8% implied probability to a 3.75% federal funds rate at 2026 year-end, edging out 3.5% at 25.0%, driven by the Federal Reserve's hawkish March 18 FOMC decision to hold the target range steady at 3.5%-3.75% for a second meeting. The updated dot plot signals just one 25 basis point cut for the year, reflecting upward revisions to 2026 core PCE inflation at 2.7% and steady unemployment projections near 4.4%, amid hotter February producer prices and oil shocks from geopolitical tensions. This tight contest hinges on inflation trajectory versus labor resilience, with April CPI data and the May FOMC meeting as pivotal swing factors.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



Beware of external links.
Beware of external links.
Frequently Asked Questions