The 82% implied probability on "No" reflects trader consensus that President Trump will not enact a corporate tax rate cut below the current 21% before 2027, following the July 2025 passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act via reconciliation, which made the 20% pass-through deduction permanent, restored full business expensing, and added individual relief like no tax on tips and overtime but omitted further corporate rate reductions amid fiscal offset concerns. Recent February 2026 State of the Union remarks emphasized tariff revenues to fund broader tax eliminations rather than corporate cuts, while regulatory tweaks have provided targeted loopholes criticized as insufficient. With Republican congressional majorities facing 2026 midterms, debt ceiling pressures, and limited reconciliation windows, traders see slim paths for new legislation.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$14,798 Vol.
$14,798 Vol.
$14,798 Vol.
$14,798 Vol.
Note that the cut does not need to go into effect before the resolution date - it just needs to be signed into law by then.
This market's primary resolution source will be official information from the Trump administration, however a consensus of credible information will also be used.
Market Opened: Nov 5, 2025, 1:03 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Note that the cut does not need to go into effect before the resolution date - it just needs to be signed into law by then.
This market's primary resolution source will be official information from the Trump administration, however a consensus of credible information will also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The 82% implied probability on "No" reflects trader consensus that President Trump will not enact a corporate tax rate cut below the current 21% before 2027, following the July 2025 passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act via reconciliation, which made the 20% pass-through deduction permanent, restored full business expensing, and added individual relief like no tax on tips and overtime but omitted further corporate rate reductions amid fiscal offset concerns. Recent February 2026 State of the Union remarks emphasized tariff revenues to fund broader tax eliminations rather than corporate cuts, while regulatory tweaks have provided targeted loopholes criticized as insufficient. With Republican congressional majorities facing 2026 midterms, debt ceiling pressures, and limited reconciliation windows, traders see slim paths for new legislation.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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