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Hezbollah admits deliberate war entry, complicating ceasefire prospects

Hezbollah admits deliberate war entry, complicating ceasefire prospects

Israel x Hezbollah Ceasefire

Hezbollah MP Ibrahim Al-Mousawi admitted on March 1, 2026, that the group entered the war deliberately, a statement that could dampen prospects for a near-term ceasefire. The Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire by April 30 market is at 93.7% YES, up from 45% a week ago.

Market reaction

Al-Mousawi’s statement points to ongoing hostilities, which sits awkwardly against the current high odds for a ceasefire by April 30. The June 30 market is at 96.6% YES, with longer-term confidence in resolution likely pricing in more complex negotiations. The market for Israel suspending operations by April 30 sits at 96.2% YES, which may overestimate the speed of any diplomatic outcome.

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Daily USDC volume runs at $1,041,878 for the April 30 ceasefire market and $63,030 for the suspension of Lebanon offensive market. The largest recent move was a 13-point spike for the April 30 ceasefire, possibly driven by speculative optimism.

Why it matters

Hezbollah’s calculated entry complicates the ceasefire picture. Al-Mousawi’s comments describe a strategic extension of conflict, not reactionary aggression. Traders banking on a quick resolution may find their positions overvalued unless concrete steps toward peace emerge. A YES share at 94¢ returns a 1.06x payout if resolved, but that requires belief in rapid de-escalation.

What to watch

Statements from Netanyahu or the IDF, along with any mediating efforts by the US or Pakistan. A joint communiqué or confirmed Hezbollah disarmament would provide more solid footing for these high odds.

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Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Hezbollah admits deliberate war entry, complicating ceasefire prospects

Hezbollah admits deliberate war entry, complicating ceasefire prospects

Israel x Hezbollah Ceasefire

Hezbollah MP Ibrahim Al-Mousawi admitted on March 1, 2026, that the group entered the war deliberately, a statement that could dampen prospects for a near-term ceasefire. The Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire by April 30 market is at 93.7% YES, up from 45% a week ago.

Market reaction

Al-Mousawi’s statement points to ongoing hostilities, which sits awkwardly against the current high odds for a ceasefire by April 30. The June 30 market is at 96.6% YES, with longer-term confidence in resolution likely pricing in more complex negotiations. The market for Israel suspending operations by April 30 sits at 96.2% YES, which may overestimate the speed of any diplomatic outcome.

Advertisement

Daily USDC volume runs at $1,041,878 for the April 30 ceasefire market and $63,030 for the suspension of Lebanon offensive market. The largest recent move was a 13-point spike for the April 30 ceasefire, possibly driven by speculative optimism.

Why it matters

Hezbollah’s calculated entry complicates the ceasefire picture. Al-Mousawi’s comments describe a strategic extension of conflict, not reactionary aggression. Traders banking on a quick resolution may find their positions overvalued unless concrete steps toward peace emerge. A YES share at 94¢ returns a 1.06x payout if resolved, but that requires belief in rapid de-escalation.

What to watch

Statements from Netanyahu or the IDF, along with any mediating efforts by the US or Pakistan. A joint communiqué or confirmed Hezbollah disarmament would provide more solid footing for these high odds.

Get prediction market intelligence as a structured API feed. Early access waitlist.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.