Trader consensus on Polymarket reflects an 88.5% implied probability of no tariff increase on Canada by June 30, driven primarily by the absence of any formal implementation timeline from President-elect Trump despite his conditional threats tied to border security and fentanyl flows. Recent developments, including diplomatic overtures from Canadian officials and U.S. industry pushback over USMCA supply chain disruptions, have tempered escalation fears, as broad tariffs risk inflating U.S. energy costs and auto sector input prices amid already elevated CPI pressures. Historical precedent from 2018 steel tariffs shows multi-month rollout delays, bolstering bets on negotiation resolutions before mid-year deadlines, with trader capital positioning for de-escalation catalysts like early 2025 bilateral talks.
Экспериментальная сводка, созданная ИИ на основе данных Polymarket · ОбновленоДа
Да
This market will resolve to “Yes” if an increase in the general tariff rate on imports into the United States from Canada goes into effect for any amount of time by June 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No”.
For the purpose of this market, "goes into effect" means the start date of the tariffs (as set by legislation or executive action) must have passed without being further delayed or suspended. Only tariffs which are in effect will qualify. Tariffs which are paused, or which have been announced but not yet gone into effect will not be considered.
Only tariffs specifically targeting Canada will qualify. For example, a new global tariff (tariffs on all imports into the U.S.) will not count toward this market's resolution.
The general tariff rate refers to the base tariff rate paid on imports, including any general tariff the U.S. imposes on all imports (e.g. a 10% tariff on all U.S. imports and a 50% tariff on top of that on Canadian imports would equal a 60% tariff). Item specific exceptions will not be considered (i.e. this market does not refer to the effective tariff rate). For the purpose of this market, an increase in the general tariff rate is defined as a rate greater than the rate in effect at the time of this market's creation.
A general tariff that includes item specific exceptions will still qualify, as long as a policy of a general tariff on all imports into the United States from Canada is in effect which is greater than the policy in effect at the time of this market's creation.
This market's primary resolution source will be official information from the Trump administration; however, a consensus of credible information will also be used.
Открытие рынка: Jan 24, 2026, 12:35 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...This market will resolve to “Yes” if an increase in the general tariff rate on imports into the United States from Canada goes into effect for any amount of time by June 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No”.
For the purpose of this market, "goes into effect" means the start date of the tariffs (as set by legislation or executive action) must have passed without being further delayed or suspended. Only tariffs which are in effect will qualify. Tariffs which are paused, or which have been announced but not yet gone into effect will not be considered.
Only tariffs specifically targeting Canada will qualify. For example, a new global tariff (tariffs on all imports into the U.S.) will not count toward this market's resolution.
The general tariff rate refers to the base tariff rate paid on imports, including any general tariff the U.S. imposes on all imports (e.g. a 10% tariff on all U.S. imports and a 50% tariff on top of that on Canadian imports would equal a 60% tariff). Item specific exceptions will not be considered (i.e. this market does not refer to the effective tariff rate). For the purpose of this market, an increase in the general tariff rate is defined as a rate greater than the rate in effect at the time of this market's creation.
A general tariff that includes item specific exceptions will still qualify, as long as a policy of a general tariff on all imports into the United States from Canada is in effect which is greater than the policy in effect at the time of this market's creation.
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...Trader consensus on Polymarket reflects an 88.5% implied probability of no tariff increase on Canada by June 30, driven primarily by the absence of any formal implementation timeline from President-elect Trump despite his conditional threats tied to border security and fentanyl flows. Recent developments, including diplomatic overtures from Canadian officials and U.S. industry pushback over USMCA supply chain disruptions, have tempered escalation fears, as broad tariffs risk inflating U.S. energy costs and auto sector input prices amid already elevated CPI pressures. Historical precedent from 2018 steel tariffs shows multi-month rollout delays, bolstering bets on negotiation resolutions before mid-year deadlines, with trader capital positioning for de-escalation catalysts like early 2025 bilateral talks.
Экспериментальная сводка, созданная ИИ на основе данных Polymarket · Обновлено
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