Trader consensus on Polymarket prices Brazil's Q1 2026 GDP growth in a razor-thin contest between the 1.9%–2.2% (42.9% implied probability) and 1.5%–1.8% (40.0%) bins, reflecting mixed signals from recent economic activity. The Central Bank's IBC-Br index surged 0.6% in February—beating median forecasts—cumulatively pointing to moderate Q1 recovery driven by manufacturing resilience, bolstering the higher band after January's 0.8% gain. However, contracting manufacturing PMI at 49.0 in March and services stagnation, alongside the Selic rate's recent trim to 14.50%, underscore downside risks from tight monetary policy and fiscal headwinds. Key swing factors include March IBC-Br data due May 18 and IBGE's full Q1 release around May 29, with Focus consensus eyeing full-year growth near 1.85%.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedBrazil GDP Growth in Q1 2026?
Brazil GDP Growth in Q1 2026?
1.5%–1.8% 54%
1.9%–2.2% 29.3%
1.1%–1.4% 18.9%
≥2.7% 6.8%
$18,704 Vol.
$18,704 Vol.
<0.7%
6%
0.7%–1.0%
18%
1.1%–1.4%
19%
1.5%–1.8%
39%
1.9%–2.2%
44%
2.3%–2.6%
21%
≥2.7%
7%
1.5%–1.8% 54%
1.9%–2.2% 29.3%
1.1%–1.4% 18.9%
≥2.7% 6.8%
$18,704 Vol.
$18,704 Vol.
<0.7%
6%
0.7%–1.0%
18%
1.1%–1.4%
19%
1.5%–1.8%
39%
1.9%–2.2%
44%
2.3%–2.6%
21%
≥2.7%
7%
The GDP release and relevant statistics will be made available here: https://www.ibge.gov.br/en/statistics/economic/national-accounts/17262-quarterly-national-accounts.html
If the specified release is not published, this market will resolve based on the first published figure for the specified quarter’s GDP growth rate compared to the same quarter of the previous year. If no data for the specified quarter is released by the date the next quarter's data is scheduled to be released, this market will resolve based on data from the last available quarter.
Note: the resolution source for this market reports GDP growth rates compared to the same quarter of the previous year to only one decimal point (e.g. 1.8%). Thus, this is the level of precision that will be used when resolving the market.
Note: data from the initial release of the referenced GDP report is what will be used to resolve this market. Data may be revised during the following quarter or as a part of the next estimate's publication, however any revisions to GDP report data made after the initial release will not be considered for this market's resolution. For the full release schedule, see: https://www.ibge.gov.br/en/calendar.html
Market Opened: Mar 23, 2026, 7:16 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...The GDP release and relevant statistics will be made available here: https://www.ibge.gov.br/en/statistics/economic/national-accounts/17262-quarterly-national-accounts.html
If the specified release is not published, this market will resolve based on the first published figure for the specified quarter’s GDP growth rate compared to the same quarter of the previous year. If no data for the specified quarter is released by the date the next quarter's data is scheduled to be released, this market will resolve based on data from the last available quarter.
Note: the resolution source for this market reports GDP growth rates compared to the same quarter of the previous year to only one decimal point (e.g. 1.8%). Thus, this is the level of precision that will be used when resolving the market.
Note: data from the initial release of the referenced GDP report is what will be used to resolve this market. Data may be revised during the following quarter or as a part of the next estimate's publication, however any revisions to GDP report data made after the initial release will not be considered for this market's resolution. For the full release schedule, see: https://www.ibge.gov.br/en/calendar.html
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Trader consensus on Polymarket prices Brazil's Q1 2026 GDP growth in a razor-thin contest between the 1.9%–2.2% (42.9% implied probability) and 1.5%–1.8% (40.0%) bins, reflecting mixed signals from recent economic activity. The Central Bank's IBC-Br index surged 0.6% in February—beating median forecasts—cumulatively pointing to moderate Q1 recovery driven by manufacturing resilience, bolstering the higher band after January's 0.8% gain. However, contracting manufacturing PMI at 49.0 in March and services stagnation, alongside the Selic rate's recent trim to 14.50%, underscore downside risks from tight monetary policy and fiscal headwinds. Key swing factors include March IBC-Br data due May 18 and IBGE's full Q1 release around May 29, with Focus consensus eyeing full-year growth near 1.85%.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated
Beware of external links.
Beware of external links.
Frequently Asked Questions