IMF cuts global growth forecast amid Iran war, raises US recession risk for 2026

3 hours ago 19

The IMF has downgraded its global growth forecast due to the Iran war and potential oil price spikes, raising US recession odds for 2026. The probability of a US recession by year’s end sits at 0% YES.

Market reaction

Traders are reacting to the IMF’s projections, with growth estimates slashed to 3.1% from 3.4% pre-conflict. Severe scenarios predict as low as 2.0% growth if oil prices surge to $110–$125 per barrel. This has increased fears of stagflation and financial tightening, which could tip the US economy into recession. The US recession by December 31 market is now under heightened scrutiny.

The ECB interest rate predictions also moved, with the odds of a 50+ bps cut at their April meeting at 0.3% YES. The Eurozone may need significant stimulus to counteract economic downturn pressures. The ECB interest rate market has seen minimal actual trading volume, with traders staying cautious.

Why it matters

The trading context here is a thin market. There is no face value volume in the US recession market and only $3 in actual USDC for the ECB rate predictions. It takes just $65 to move the market 5 percentage points, meaning a single trader could significantly influence odds with a modest position.

The IMF’s downgrade points to real risks of oil-induced stagflation. For those betting on a US recession, a YES share at current levels would pay off substantially if that scenario materializes. The key variables are oil prices and central bank responses. The ECB’s next move might provide a clearer direction.

What to watch

Watch the IMF-World Bank meetings’ final outcomes and any shifts in central bank rhetoric. Christine Lagarde’s statements and new economic data releases will shape the next moves in these markets.

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