Trader consensus on Polymarket reflects close tracking between SOFR—the Secured Overnight Financing Rate, a benchmark for overnight repo funding—and the Federal Reserve's target range for the federal funds rate, currently at 4.75–5.00% following the 50 basis point cut on September 18 amid cooling inflation. Recent softer-than-expected August CPI (2.5% year-over-year) and nonfarm payrolls have reinforced market-implied odds for two additional 25 basis point reductions by year-end, per CME FedWatch Tool probabilities exceeding 90% for a December cut. SOFR deviations could arise from Treasury general account replenishment, reverse repo facility drainage, or quarter-end liquidity strains, with March 2025 resolution hinging on the FOMC meeting March 18–19 and prior data like February CPI (February 11 release) and payrolls. Upcoming November 7 and December 18 FOMC decisions will calibrate rate path expectations.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedWill SOFR hit __ in March?
Will SOFR hit __ in March?
↑3.80
2%
↑3.78%
24%
↑3.76%
52%
↑3.74%
36%
↑3.72%
59%
↓3.60%
14%
↓3.58%
2%
$1,389 Vol.
↑3.80
2%
↑3.78%
24%
↑3.76%
52%
↑3.74%
36%
↑3.72%
59%
↓3.60%
14%
↓3.58%
2%
This market will resolve to “Yes” if the Federal Reserve Bank of New York publishes a daily SOFR rate (%) equal to or above the listed value for any business day between March 1 and March 31, 2026. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No”.
This market will resolve as soon as the SOFR rate is equal to or above the listed value during the specified period, or when SOFR data is published for the final business day on or before March 31, 2026. If no data is published for the final business day on or before March 31, 2026 by April 07, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve based on the data published up to that point. Business day refers to any day treated as such by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Any revisions to the daily SOFR values published by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York prior to the release of SOFR data for the final business day on or before March 31, 2026 will be considered; however, these revisions will not disqualify a previously published SOFR rate from counting. Any revisions published after the release of SOFR data for the final business day on or before March 31, 2026 will not be considered.
The primary resolution source for this market will be the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, specifically the Secured Overnight Financing Rate Data table at https://www.newyorkfed.org/markets/reference-rates/sofr.
Note: This market’s resolution source publishes the SOFR rate to two decimal places (e.g. 3.65%). Thus, this is the level of precision that will be used when resolving this market.
Market Opened: Mar 4, 2026, 10:28 AM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on Polymarket reflects close tracking between SOFR—the Secured Overnight Financing Rate, a benchmark for overnight repo funding—and the Federal Reserve's target range for the federal funds rate, currently at 4.75–5.00% following the 50 basis point cut on September 18 amid cooling inflation. Recent softer-than-expected August CPI (2.5% year-over-year) and nonfarm payrolls have reinforced market-implied odds for two additional 25 basis point reductions by year-end, per CME FedWatch Tool probabilities exceeding 90% for a December cut. SOFR deviations could arise from Treasury general account replenishment, reverse repo facility drainage, or quarter-end liquidity strains, with March 2025 resolution hinging on the FOMC meeting March 18–19 and prior data like February CPI (February 11 release) and payrolls. Upcoming November 7 and December 18 FOMC decisions will calibrate rate path expectations.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated
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