Trader sentiment on bank failures through 2026 remains subdued, with only one small institution—Metropolitan Capital Bank & Trust—failing in January amid commercial real estate (CRE) exposure, versus two in 2025. Regional banks hold elevated CRE loans comprising over 300% of equity for some, alongside $400 billion in system-wide unrealized securities losses, though Q4 2025 FDIC data shows problem banks at a normal 1.4% of total institutions and CRE delinquencies stable per recent Q1 earnings. Lower Fed funds rate at 3.5%-3.75% eases funding pressures ahead of $1.5 trillion CRE maturities by year-end. Key catalysts include Q1 earnings disclosures through May, May FOMC meeting, and June stress test results assessing recession scenarios with 10% unemployment peak.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated$18,731 Vol.

US Bank
36%

Truist
17%

Scotiabank
11%

BNY
11%

Wells Fargo
11%

Citigroup
10%

Morgan Stanley
10%

JPMorgan Chase
9%

BMO
8%

Bank of America
8%

Santander
8%

Lloyds
8%

HSBC
7%

UBS
7%

RBC
7%

Deutsche Bank
6%

BNP Paribas
6%

Goldman Sachs
4%

KeyBank
34%
$18,731 Vol.

US Bank
36%

Truist
17%

Scotiabank
11%

BNY
11%

Wells Fargo
11%

Citigroup
10%

Morgan Stanley
10%

JPMorgan Chase
9%

BMO
8%

Bank of America
8%

Santander
8%

Lloyds
8%

HSBC
7%

UBS
7%

RBC
7%

Deutsche Bank
6%

BNP Paribas
6%

Goldman Sachs
4%

KeyBank
34%
For the purposes of this market, the listed bank will be considered to have “failed” if any of the following occurs under the bank’s applicable legal or regulatory framework, within the listed date range:
- The listed bank’s primary banking regulator formally declares the institution insolvent or non-viable, or withdraws or revokes the bank’s license or authorization, and such determination initiates or directly results in resolution, liquidation, wind-down, or transfer actions.
- The listed bank enters a court-ordered liquidation, statutory resolution regime, or regulator-mandated wind-down, including the use of resolution tools such as bail-ins, forced asset transfers, or the establishment of a bridge bank.
- A government or resolution authority intervenes in a manner that wipes out or subordinates existing equity of the listed bank and transfers effective control of the bank to the state or a designated resolution authority, with continued operations dependent on official intervention.
- The listed bank publicly defaults on a payment obligation, including derivatives margin, repo, or physical commodity delivery, and such default is formally acknowledged by the bank’s primary regulator or resolution authority and directly results in the initiation of resolution, liquidation, license withdrawal, or regulator-mandated transfer of the bank.
- The listed bank is subject to a compulsory merger, acquisition, or transfer of all or substantially all of its assets and liabilities ordered or directed by its primary banking regulator or resolution authority due to the bank’s financial condition or to prevent failure, regardless of whether a formal insolvency declaration or immediate equity wipeout is publicly announced at the time of transfer.
If there is a potential failure of the listed bank within this market’s date range and a qualifying regulatory or court action has occurred but has not yet been fully published by the relevant authority, this market may remain open until April 30, 2027, 11:59 PM ET to allow for confirmation. If no qualifying failure is confirmed by that date, this market will resolve to “No.”
The primary resolution source for this market will be official statements, filings, or actions by the listed bank’s primary banking regulator or resolution authority; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Market Opened: Apr 8, 2026, 7:20 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...For the purposes of this market, the listed bank will be considered to have “failed” if any of the following occurs under the bank’s applicable legal or regulatory framework, within the listed date range:
- The listed bank’s primary banking regulator formally declares the institution insolvent or non-viable, or withdraws or revokes the bank’s license or authorization, and such determination initiates or directly results in resolution, liquidation, wind-down, or transfer actions.
- The listed bank enters a court-ordered liquidation, statutory resolution regime, or regulator-mandated wind-down, including the use of resolution tools such as bail-ins, forced asset transfers, or the establishment of a bridge bank.
- A government or resolution authority intervenes in a manner that wipes out or subordinates existing equity of the listed bank and transfers effective control of the bank to the state or a designated resolution authority, with continued operations dependent on official intervention.
- The listed bank publicly defaults on a payment obligation, including derivatives margin, repo, or physical commodity delivery, and such default is formally acknowledged by the bank’s primary regulator or resolution authority and directly results in the initiation of resolution, liquidation, license withdrawal, or regulator-mandated transfer of the bank.
- The listed bank is subject to a compulsory merger, acquisition, or transfer of all or substantially all of its assets and liabilities ordered or directed by its primary banking regulator or resolution authority due to the bank’s financial condition or to prevent failure, regardless of whether a formal insolvency declaration or immediate equity wipeout is publicly announced at the time of transfer.
If there is a potential failure of the listed bank within this market’s date range and a qualifying regulatory or court action has occurred but has not yet been fully published by the relevant authority, this market may remain open until April 30, 2027, 11:59 PM ET to allow for confirmation. If no qualifying failure is confirmed by that date, this market will resolve to “No.”
The primary resolution source for this market will be official statements, filings, or actions by the listed bank’s primary banking regulator or resolution authority; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader sentiment on bank failures through 2026 remains subdued, with only one small institution—Metropolitan Capital Bank & Trust—failing in January amid commercial real estate (CRE) exposure, versus two in 2025. Regional banks hold elevated CRE loans comprising over 300% of equity for some, alongside $400 billion in system-wide unrealized securities losses, though Q4 2025 FDIC data shows problem banks at a normal 1.4% of total institutions and CRE delinquencies stable per recent Q1 earnings. Lower Fed funds rate at 3.5%-3.75% eases funding pressures ahead of $1.5 trillion CRE maturities by year-end. Key catalysts include Q1 earnings disclosures through May, May FOMC meeting, and June stress test results assessing recession scenarios with 10% unemployment peak.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated



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