Israel’s airstrikes on over 100 sites in Lebanon have further complicated ceasefire prospects with Hezbollah. The market for a ceasefire by April 30 is at
Market reaction
The April 30 market has climbed to
Why it matters
The volume tells the story. Daily USDC traded on the April 30 market is $1,041,878. Compare that to a thin $8,677 in the Israel military action against Iran market, where odds have dropped to 0.1% YES. Israel’s strikes on areas previously considered safe represent a shift in tactics that could strain Hezbollah’s operational capacity. For traders, the question is whether this escalation is a pressure tactic to force negotiations or a step toward broader conflict. At 7¢, buying NO shares on the April 30 ceasefire is a contrarian bet, since a ceasefire looks less likely when tensions are this high.
What to watch
Statements from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and IDF spokesperson Avichay Adraee will matter most. Any acknowledgment of ceasefire talks, or continued military aggression, will move the markets. International mediation efforts, particularly from Marco Rubio, could also shift the odds.
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