Key Takeaways:
- Polymarket prices an 81.5% chance the Fed holds rates in July 2026
- BIS warned rising debt and AI-driven risks amplify global vulnerabilities
- Fed Chair Warsh said AI is "structurally disinflationary," complicating the policy outlook
Key Takeaways:

Polymarket traders see an 81.5% probability the Federal Reserve leaves interest rates unchanged at its July meeting, as a Bank for International Settlements warning on debt and AI-driven fragilities reinforces expectations for a steady policy stance.
"The combination of elevated leverage and rapid technological change creates a new class of vulnerabilities that could amplify shocks," the BIS said in its annual economic report, flagging rising debt burdens, an AI-driven investment boom, and lingering financial fragilities as sources of global risk. The warning comes as the Fed's next rate decision on July 29 approaches, with the fed funds rate at 5.25% to 5.50% — unchanged since a 25-basis-point hike in July 2023 that marked the last move in the current tightening cycle.
On Polymarket, the "No change" contract in the Fed Decision in July ladder market has climbed to 81.5% Yes, up 10 percentage points from 71.5% in the prior reading. A 25-basis-point increase is priced at 16.75%, while a 25-basis-point cut trades at just 1.25%. The market has matched $22.35 million in volume ahead of its July 29 resolution date. Across the broader rate-path complex, the "How many Fed rate cuts in 2026?" contract shows 77.35% probability of zero cuts on $39.46 million in volume, underscoring how firmly markets lean toward a higher-for-longer narrative.
Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, speaking at the European Central Bank Forum in Sintra, Portugal, said the central bank will debate the rate decision when policymakers convene in four weeks. "When we get into that room and shut the door we're going to have a good debate," Warsh said, offering no indication of the outcome. He described AI as "structurally disinflationary," a view that contrasts with some Fed officials who see AI-driven capital expenditures as potentially inflationary. The divergence adds complexity to the policy calculus as the Consumer Price Index runs at 3.8% year-over-year as of April, well above the Fed's 2% target.
The BIS report highlighted the interaction between leverage and fast-moving technological change as a potential source of instability, noting that pressure points can build even when headline indicators appear calm. The warning carries weight as global debt levels remain elevated following the pandemic-era borrowing surge. The last time the BIS issued a similarly stark warning on financial fragilities was in June 2022, when the Fed had just delivered a 75-basis-point hike — the largest in 28 years — and the S&P 500 proceeded to fall 8% over the following month.
The macro backdrop has been shaped by easing energy prices after the US and Iran reached a preliminary peace framework. Brent crude traded at about $72 a barrel Wednesday, down sharply from a peak of $120 during the conflict's height. The European Central Bank raised rates on June 11, citing inflation driven by the war's consequences, while the Fed has kept its stance unchanged. Warsh pointed to the AI boom as a separate driver, saying companies are investing in the expectation that the supply side of the economy will expand — a dynamic with "huge implications for monetary policy."
What's at stake: If the Fed holds in July as markets expect, the focus shifts to whether the BIS-flagged risks — particularly the interaction of debt loads and AI-driven investment cycles — could force a later pivot. Overnight index swap markets currently price no rate cuts through year-end, but any deterioration in credit conditions or a sharper-than-expected slowdown in AI-related CapEx could reopen the debate. The next CPI release and the July employment report, both due before the Fed's decision, will provide the final data points for policymakers.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.