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Iran pulls out of Islamabad peace talks, ceasefire extension uncertain

Iran pulls out of Islamabad peace talks, ceasefire extension uncertain

US-Iran Ceasefire Announcement

Pakistan’s Prime Minister is keeping peace talk plans alive in Islamabad despite Iran pulling out, and the odds for a ceasefire extension by April 21, 2026, have dropped to 64% YES, down from 86% a day ago.

Market reaction

Traders moved fast. The April 21 ceasefire announcement market now sits at 18% YES, up from 8% yesterday. The odds of a permanent peace deal by April 22 have dropped to 15.5% YES, halved from 40% just 24 hours prior. The ceasefire extension market has $82,767 in USDC traded and requires $9,463 to move the price five points, so it’s liquid but reactive. The largest recent move was a 4-point drop after Iran’s withdrawal became public.

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Why it matters

Iran’s refusal to attend talks in Islamabad is bad for both short-term ceasefire extensions and long-term peace deals. Without Iran at the table, the trajectory shifts from de-escalation toward renewed hostilities, especially given Trump’s threats of resumed bombing. At 36¢, a YES share in the April 30 peace deal market pays $1 if resolved, a 2.78x return, but that would require a diplomatic reversal that nothing currently points to.

What to watch

Trump’s statements and any Iranian media signals. A last-minute change, such as Iran returning to the table or Pakistan mediating a breakthrough, could move these markets sharply in either direction.

API access

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.

Iran pulls out of Islamabad peace talks, ceasefire extension uncertain

Iran pulls out of Islamabad peace talks, ceasefire extension uncertain

US-Iran Ceasefire Announcement

Pakistan’s Prime Minister is keeping peace talk plans alive in Islamabad despite Iran pulling out, and the odds for a ceasefire extension by April 21, 2026, have dropped to 64% YES, down from 86% a day ago.

Market reaction

Traders moved fast. The April 21 ceasefire announcement market now sits at 18% YES, up from 8% yesterday. The odds of a permanent peace deal by April 22 have dropped to 15.5% YES, halved from 40% just 24 hours prior. The ceasefire extension market has $82,767 in USDC traded and requires $9,463 to move the price five points, so it’s liquid but reactive. The largest recent move was a 4-point drop after Iran’s withdrawal became public.

Advertisement

Why it matters

Iran’s refusal to attend talks in Islamabad is bad for both short-term ceasefire extensions and long-term peace deals. Without Iran at the table, the trajectory shifts from de-escalation toward renewed hostilities, especially given Trump’s threats of resumed bombing. At 36¢, a YES share in the April 30 peace deal market pays $1 if resolved, a 2.78x return, but that would require a diplomatic reversal that nothing currently points to.

What to watch

Trump’s statements and any Iranian media signals. A last-minute change, such as Iran returning to the table or Pakistan mediating a breakthrough, could move these markets sharply in either direction.

API access

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.