Markets React Sharply to Doubts About Tariff Legality
Prediction-market traders are pulling their bets on the survival of Donald Trump’s sweeping import tariffs after hints of scepticism emerged during Supreme Court arguments.
Contracts on prediction platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket that pay out if the tariffs are upheld have dropped to around 27%, down from nearly 45% before oral arguments began.
The change reflects growing expectations that the Supreme Court will strike down Trump’s reliance on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose tariffs, a decision that could reshape U.S. trade law and global markets.
Justices Appear Sceptical – Traders Take Note
During hearings, Chief Justice John Roberts questioned whether the executive branch had overstepped its trade authority. Justice Amy Coney Barrett pressed the government on the potential precedent it would set.
That cautious tone quickly filtered into markets. “The pricing shift is real,” said one New York-based derivatives analyst. “Traders are betting on judicial limits to presidential trade powers.”
Why the Ruling Matters for Markets and Trade
If the court invalidates Trump’s tariffs, analysts expect:
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Lower import costs for U.S. manufacturers and retailers, boosting earnings.
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Refund or credit exposure for collected duties, pressuring Treasury finances.
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Volatility in commodity and currency markets, as global supply chains recalibrate.
According to Business Insider, a reversal could act as “rocket fuel” for equities, especially for automakers, retail, and construction suppliers tied to cross-border trade.
A Broader Signal of Policy Uncertainty
The drop in prediction-market odds reflects more than legal betting. It highlights growing unease over the stability of U.S. trade policy.
“For investors, it’s about confidence,” said Priya Misra, head of global rates strategy at TD Securities. “No one knows what trade framework we’ll have six months from now.”
Treasury trading desks have begun modelling scenarios for a post-tariff world, where lower import costs might reduce inflation but widen the deficit.
The Bottom Line
Prediction-market traders have sharply reduced their bets that Trump’s tariff regime will survive Supreme Court scrutiny, from 45% to roughly 27%.
The market is signalling that legal risk, not just politics, now drives U.S. trade exposure. A single court decision could reset tariff policy, boost equities, and reorder global supply flows.





