DJIA
Dow Jones Industrial
NASDAQ
Nasdaq Composite
S&P 500
Standard & Poor's
RUT
Russell 2000
VIX
Volatility Index

S&P 500 Sectors

Source: external sector market feed for the S&P 500. Refreshed every 5 minutes; underlying prices may still be delayed.

Market Movers

Source: external U.S. equity quote feed filtered to large-cap and mid-cap names. Refreshed every 5 minutes; displayed moves may be delayed.
SymbolNamePriceChg% Chg

Futures & Commodities

Source: external futures and commodity quote feeds. Refreshed every 5 minutes; displayed prices are delayed market data.
ContractLast1D1M1Y
Crude Oil
Brent Crude
Gold
Silver
DJIA Futures
S&P 500 Futures

Currencies & Forex

Source: external foreign-exchange quote feeds. Refreshed every 5 minutes; values may be delayed and rounded for display.
PairLast1D1M1Y
EUR/USD
USD/JPY
GBP/USD
USD/CHF
USD/CNY
U.S. Dollar Index

Bonds & Yields

Source: Treasury and corporate yield series from market feeds and FRED-linked data. Refreshed every 5 minutes; some underlying series only update daily.
BondYield %1D1M1Y
U.S. 10-Year
U.S. 5-Year
U.S. 30-Year
US Corp IG Yield
US High Yield

Fed Rate Probabilities

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Source: Polymarket event markets. Refreshed every 5 minutes; these are market-implied probabilities, not official Federal Reserve forecasts.
Methodology and context

What this shows

This panel displays market-implied probabilities for upcoming FOMC outcomes using event-market pricing rather than a single point forecast.

Why it matters

Fed expectations shape rates, equities, the dollar, and credit spreads. A probability distribution is often more useful than a binary “cut or hold” framing.

How it is built

Probabilities are pulled from Polymarket event markets and refreshed every 5 minutes. They should be read as market-implied odds, not as official guidance or a guaranteed forecast.

U.S. Yield Curve

Source: FRED U.S. Treasury constant maturity series, published by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Updates when new daily Treasury data is released.
Current 1Y Ago
Methodology and context

What this shows

This chart compares the current U.S. Treasury constant-maturity curve with the same curve one year earlier, which makes changes in slope and inversion easier to spot quickly.

Why it matters

The shape of the yield curve is one of the clearest market signals for growth expectations, inflation expectations, and policy pressure across maturities.

How it is built

Data is pulled from FRED Treasury constant-maturity series and rendered as a current-versus-one-year-ago comparison. Updates depend on the underlying daily Treasury release schedule.

Economic Data

Source: FRED and public economic releases. Refreshed every 5 minutes; each indicator updates on its own official release schedule.
Period Indicator Prev Latest Change
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Methodology and context

What this shows

This panel highlights a compact set of macro indicators with previous values, latest releases, and point changes so you can scan economic direction without digging through multiple calendars.

Why it matters

Markets move on changes in growth, inflation, labor, and spending data. Presenting the previous release next to the latest one makes the direction of change more obvious.

How it is built

Series are sourced from FRED and public releases, then normalized into a common table view. Refresh cadence is 5 minutes, but each indicator still follows its own official publication schedule.

Data displayed on this site is delayed at least 15 minutes, may be sourced from external market-data providers, and is provided for informational purposes only. No guarantee is made as to accuracy, completeness, or timeliness.