Ask Signal Bureau

Answer Engine

Ask about what's next

Ask anything about what happens next. We give you a clear, honest read based on what's actually happening in the news right now, and what would change the answer. For information only, not advice.

Answers are published at an unlisted public link so you can share them (recent ones may appear on this page; stale links expire to a fresh re-ask after ~36 hours). Don’t include personal or confidential information in your question. Privacy & deletion

Try:
WHEN THE QUESTION SUPPORTS IT, A READ CONTAINS
  • Our calibrated read: a % Yes / % No with the reasoning, never a hot take.
  • The evidence: the live headlines, article text, and the desk’s own morning synthesis the read is grounded in, source-checked by a second model.
  • Our read vs. the crowd: the exact matching prediction market's price next to ours — only when a market's terms actually match the question.
  • What would change this: the specific developments that would move the answer.

And when a question is outside what we track — or no market matches its exact terms — the engine says so and abstains from the missing piece rather than faking it.

THIS MORNING’S SYNTHESIS · 2026-07-14

The world is repositioning around two colliding stories: the Federal Reserve is pivoting toward tightening, and the Iran diplomatic window is slamming shut. The Fed July rate-hike market jumped 10 points to 33% on $394K of volume — the crowd is pricing a hawkish turn despite mixed economic signals. At the same time, the market on a US-Iran diplomatic meeting by July 31 collapsed 19 points to 20% on $62K of volume, while oil markets surged 42 points to 62% on $308K. The money is saying diplomacy is dead and energy risk is back.

These moves are connected. Iran tensions are escalating — Al Jazeera reports resumed US-Iran strikes and Al-Monitor confirms tanker hits in the Strait of Hormuz as millions mourn Khamenei. The diplomatic collapse is pushing oil higher, but the Fed repricing suggests the central bank sees inflation risk from energy shocks, not just domestic demand. Three sources on the Fed are directionally unclear (SMH and Financial Post note division among policymakers), but the volume confirms conviction. On Iran, all three matched sources (Al Jazeera, Al-Monitor, BBC) report escalation with no contradicting voices — the news and the money agree on direction.

The gap worth watching: crypto regulatory clarity is fading. The Clarity Act market dropped 13 points to 32% on $58K of volume, even as CoinDesk reports the newest version may drop next week. Two of three sources support progress (CoinDesk twice), but one contradicts (The Intercept cites Trump windfall as a political obstacle). The market is pricing the obstacle, not the optimism — $58K says legislative momentum is stalling despite the news cycle.

Written each morning by the desk from tracked prediction markets and coverage. Informational only.