A French soldier died after an attack on UN peacekeepers in Lebanon, but the Polymarket contract for an Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire by June 30, 2026, holds at
Market reaction
The attack is attributed to Hezbollah. Despite that, markets for both the April 30 and June 30 ceasefire contracts are priced at
Why it matters
The gap between 100% market confidence and an active attack that killed a peacekeeper is striking. Traders may be waiting for more concrete developments before committing capital. A ceasefire contract priced at 100% leaves no room for doubt, yet the attack itself is evidence that conditions on the ground are not stable.
What to watch
The French soldier’s death complicates diplomatic efforts without triggering any market reaction so far. Persistent attacks could erode confidence if they continue without a strong diplomatic response. Key signals to monitor: new statements from Netanyahu or Hezbollah confirming ongoing hostilities, and any announcements from the U.S. or Pakistan regarding mediation talks. Either could move these contracts off their current ceiling.
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