Israeli airstrikes hit southern Lebanon, raising 2026 ceasefire questions

1 hour ago 13

Israeli airstrikes struck southern Lebanon, raising questions about the 2026 ceasefire. The Trump endorsement of an Israeli ceasefire market sits at 100¢ YES, with no recent trades.

Market reaction

The Trump endorsement market is static at 100¢ with zero trading activity. The Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire by June 30 and by April 30 markets also sit at 100¢ YES, again with no actual trading. The suspension of the Lebanon offensive market holds at 100¢ YES, even as events on the ground point in the opposite direction.

Why it matters

The absence of trades across all these markets means the 100¢ prices are placeholders, not real expressions of market sentiment. Order books are thin enough that any meaningful trading could move odds sharply. The resumption of airstrikes in southern Lebanon directly contradicts the premise behind these contracts, and the possibility of a Trump endorsement of the ceasefire looks less likely with each violation.

What to watch

Statements from the IDF and Israeli government confirming or denying ceasefire intentions are the most likely catalysts. Any shift in language from Netanyahu or the IDF would be the first signal of a strategy change or new diplomatic push. Traders should treat the current stasis in odds with skepticism, since new developments could move these illiquid markets fast.

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