US President Donald Trump announced a three-week extension to the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire, initially set to expire April 27. Meanwhile, Hezbollah launched a heavy rocket attack into northern Israel. The ceasefire extension market for April 26, 2026, sits at
Market reaction
Trump’s extension announcement pushed the Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire extension market to near certainty. The April 26 sub-market barely moved on the news, with traders already pricing in the extension’s credibility. Over the past week, this market spiked from 68% to 100%, even as Hezbollah launched rockets into northern Israel.
The Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire by June 30 market tells a different story. A formal ceasefire by the end of June remains a long shot, with odds weighed down by ongoing tensions and no disarmament agreement in place. Traders are pricing in the real possibility of further escalations alongside whatever diplomatic efforts continue.
Why it matters
Trading volume on the ceasefire extension market is $3.1M in USDC daily. Moving the odds by 5 percentage points would require over $1.6M, a sign of strong liquidity and institutional participation. The largest recorded price move was a 50-point drop, likely reflecting earlier skepticism before Trump’s announcement reversed sentiment.
What to watch
The extension buys time, but the underlying problems haven’t changed. Hezbollah’s rocket attack shows how fragile the truce is without progress on core demands like disarmament and Israeli withdrawal. At 22¢, a YES share in the June 30 ceasefire market pays $1 if confirmed, a
Watch for joint statements from Israel and Hezbollah, or new US diplomatic moves. Any announcement from Trump on a broader regional strategy could move these markets sharply.
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