Netanyahu expressed surprise over Trump’s “prohibition” on Israeli strikes against Hezbollah in Lebanon. The market for Trump’s endorsement of an Israeli ceasefire by April 30 sits at
Market reaction
The Israeli ceasefire market with Hezbollah by April 30 remains at
Why it matters
Trump’s prohibition on strikes is a direct constraint on Israeli military operations in Lebanon, and it puts U.S. weight behind maintaining the ceasefire. The tension here is specific: Netanyahu wants the option to strike Hezbollah targets, and Trump is blocking it. That gap between U.S. and Israeli positions on military action could widen if Hezbollah provocations increase or if Israeli domestic politics push Netanyahu toward a harder line.
What to watch
Traders should track statements from the White House and Israeli officials. Any clarification from the Pentagon on enforcement of the prohibition, or signs of resumed Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon, could break the current 100% consensus. A YES share at 100¢ pays $1 if Trump endorses the ceasefire by April 30, but with odds already at
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