The Bank of Canada's June 10 decision to hold the overnight rate steady at 2.25%—its fifth consecutive pause—reflects balanced risks between persistent economic slack and transitory energy-driven inflation, underpinning the 94.5% market-implied probability of no change at the July 15 meeting. Weak Q1 GDP, ongoing excess supply, and U.S. trade policy uncertainty have tempered growth prospects, while April CPI at 2.8% (core measures near 2%) stems primarily from elevated oil prices tied to Middle East developments, with limited pass-through to broader prices. Traders price in this cautious stance amid the upcoming Monetary Policy Report, though a sharper growth deterioration or sustained core inflation above target could still introduce modest volatility.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedBank of Canada Decision in July?
No Change 95%
25 bps decrease 4.7%
25 bps increase 1.5%
50+ bps decrease <1%
$11,707 Vol.
$11,707 Vol.
50+ bps increase
<1%
25 bps increase
1%
No Change
95%
25 bps decrease
5%
50+ bps decrease
<1%
No Change 95%
25 bps decrease 4.7%
25 bps increase 1.5%
50+ bps decrease <1%
$11,707 Vol.
$11,707 Vol.
50+ bps increase
<1%
25 bps increase
1%
No Change
95%
25 bps decrease
5%
50+ bps decrease
<1%
The resolution source will be official information from the Bank of Canada, including the statement or release from its July 2026 interest rate announcement, scheduled for July 15, 2026, as listed on the official Bank of Canada calendar (https://www.bankofcanada.ca/core-functions/monetary-policy/key-interest-rate/#target-dates). This market may resolve as soon as the statement or release of the Bank of Canada resulting from its July 2026 interest rate decision with relevant data is issued.
If the specified rate is defined by an upper and lower bound, the relevant change will be the change to the upper bound.
If the specified rate is changed to a level not expressed in the displayed options, the change will be rounded according to the following guidelines. Increases or decreases of less than 25 bps will be rounded to 25 bps (e.g. an increase or decrease of 10 bps would be considered to be an increase or decrease of 25 bps). Increases or decreases of greater than 25 bps will be rounded to the nearest 25 bps and will be rounded away from 0 in cases of equidistance (e.g., an increase or decrease of 37.5 bps would be considered to be an increase or decrease of 50 bps). Displayed options of “Increase” or “Decrease” will include policy rate increases or decreases of any size.
If the specified announcement is postponed to a date and time before the start of the next scheduled announcement, this market will resolve based on the outcome of that postponed announcement. If the specified announcement is cancelled, or postponed such that no decision is announced by the start of the next scheduled announcement, this market will resolve to the “No Change” bracket. Emergency changes to the specified rate not resulting from the specified announcement will not be considered.
Market Opened: Apr 29, 2026, 7:51 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...The resolution source will be official information from the Bank of Canada, including the statement or release from its July 2026 interest rate announcement, scheduled for July 15, 2026, as listed on the official Bank of Canada calendar (https://www.bankofcanada.ca/core-functions/monetary-policy/key-interest-rate/#target-dates). This market may resolve as soon as the statement or release of the Bank of Canada resulting from its July 2026 interest rate decision with relevant data is issued.
If the specified rate is defined by an upper and lower bound, the relevant change will be the change to the upper bound.
If the specified rate is changed to a level not expressed in the displayed options, the change will be rounded according to the following guidelines. Increases or decreases of less than 25 bps will be rounded to 25 bps (e.g. an increase or decrease of 10 bps would be considered to be an increase or decrease of 25 bps). Increases or decreases of greater than 25 bps will be rounded to the nearest 25 bps and will be rounded away from 0 in cases of equidistance (e.g., an increase or decrease of 37.5 bps would be considered to be an increase or decrease of 50 bps). Displayed options of “Increase” or “Decrease” will include policy rate increases or decreases of any size.
If the specified announcement is postponed to a date and time before the start of the next scheduled announcement, this market will resolve based on the outcome of that postponed announcement. If the specified announcement is cancelled, or postponed such that no decision is announced by the start of the next scheduled announcement, this market will resolve to the “No Change” bracket. Emergency changes to the specified rate not resulting from the specified announcement will not be considered.
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...The Bank of Canada's June 10 decision to hold the overnight rate steady at 2.25%—its fifth consecutive pause—reflects balanced risks between persistent economic slack and transitory energy-driven inflation, underpinning the 94.5% market-implied probability of no change at the July 15 meeting. Weak Q1 GDP, ongoing excess supply, and U.S. trade policy uncertainty have tempered growth prospects, while April CPI at 2.8% (core measures near 2%) stems primarily from elevated oil prices tied to Middle East developments, with limited pass-through to broader prices. Traders price in this cautious stance amid the upcoming Monetary Policy Report, though a sharper growth deterioration or sustained core inflation above target could still introduce modest volatility.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated


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