Treasury yields hit their highest level since March 30, 2026, as the U.S.-Iran conflict continues. Odds for a Fed rate cut after the April 2026 meeting sit flat at
Market reaction
Rising yields reflect persistent inflation fears, driven by the Iran conflict and elevated oil prices. In the Fed Decision April and June market on Polymarket, both the 25 bps and 50+ bps sub-markets hold at near-zero odds for cuts. A 49-point spike in trading activity at 11:40 AM produced no lasting movement; odds quickly reverted.
Why it matters
The geopolitical term premium in Treasury yields, now at roughly 4.36%, works directly against rate cuts. Higher yields signal inflation concerns, which reduce the probability of dovish Fed action. Combined 24-hour USDC volume is $100,536, and traders show little conviction in a rate cut. Moving the market five percentage points requires significant capital, pointing to institutional-level thresholds.
What to watch
For contrarian bets, buying YES at
Key triggers to monitor: upcoming CPI or PCE data releases, Powell’s statements, and any shifts in U.S.-Iran dynamics. Any of these could force a reassessment of the Fed’s policy stance.
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