Breaking

Fed Rate Hike by July 2026 Meeting? YES odds plunge 27.1 pp despite $90K whale inflow

Whale buying of $90K in YES contracts contrasts with a sharp 27.1 percentage point drop in the market price to 6.9%.

The “Fed Rate Hike by July 2026 Meeting?” market on Polymarket saw a dramatic 27.1 percentage point decline in its YES price over the past 24 hours, dropping from 33.9% to 6.9% as of July 15, 2026. This sharp repricing signals a major shift in market sentiment away from the likelihood of a rate hike by that date.

Interestingly, this price movement diverged from whale activity. Despite the falling odds, whale traders collectively bought $163K in YES contracts and sold $73K, resulting in a net inflow of $90K into YES positions. A total of 83 unique whales participated in this flow, indicating significant whale engagement contrasting with the price drop.

Polymarket’s 24-hour volume for this market stood at $118K, with a lifetime market volume of $645K and 500 unique traders recorded on-chain. Notably, the Polymarket Breaking YES price of 6.9% differs markedly from Polydata’s on-chain mid-price at 17.1%, underscoring a divergence in price sources.

The combination of a steep decline in the market’s implied probability and substantial whale buying activity suggests a complex dynamic where large traders are accumulating positions amid falling prices. This tension between price and flow reflects differing interpretations of the likelihood of a Fed rate hike by July 2026.

Market Fed Rate Hike by July 2026 Meeting?
Market ID 1808546
24h price change +27.1 pp
YES now (PM Breaking) 6.9%
YES ~24h ago (est.) 33.9%
YES (Polydata overview) 17.1%
Whale net flow (24h) $90K
Whale buy / sell (24h) $163K / $73K
Unique whales (24h) 83
Volume 24h (PM) $118K
Unique traders (Polydata) 500

Source: Polydata API v3 · /whales/flow + Polymarket Breaking · snapshot 2026-07-15. Data: Polydata API v3. On-chain figures are public. Realized PnL is computed over resolved markets only and excludes open positions, so it is conservative versus the Polymarket UI. This is not investment advice.

Read next

archive →