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Northern Israelis criticize Lebanon ceasefire, question government’s strategy

Northern Israelis criticize Lebanon ceasefire, question government’s strategy

Israel x Hezbollah Ceasefire

Northern Israelis slammed the Lebanon ceasefire, accusing the government of enabling future massacres. Netanyahu decided not to hold a Cabinet vote on the ceasefire, and traders are now reevaluating the likelihood of a confirmed deal with Hezbollah. The Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire by April 30 market sits at 99.2% YES, up from 45% a week ago.

The April 30 ceasefire market jumped from 59% to 72% in a single spike. The June 30 odds are higher still at 99.6% YES, meaning traders expect a resolution by mid-year. But opposition from northern Israelis points to internal resistance that could drag these probabilities down.

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The market for Israel’s suspension of the Lebanon offensive by April 30 is at 99.4% YES, up from 87% a day ago. This spike tracks with expectations of a short-term pause in operations, but Netanyahu’s reluctance to formalize the ceasefire raises questions about longer-term de-escalation.

USDC volume across the Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire markets totals $1.2M daily. Order book depth shows $50,093 needed to move the April 30 ceasefire market five points, a thick book. The largest single move was a 13-point spike.

Northern Israeli opposition matters because it exposes a fracture in domestic support for the ceasefire strategy. If concerns about renewed Hezbollah attacks prove justified, odds of a lasting ceasefire could fall. At 6¢, a NO share for the June 30 ceasefire pays $1 if the ceasefire doesn’t hold, a 16.67x return. That bet only makes sense if you believe domestic opposition will stall any lasting peace deal.

Watch for statements from Netanyahu or the IDF clarifying the ceasefire’s scope. A shift in language from the Defense Ministry could move these markets fast.

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.

Northern Israelis criticize Lebanon ceasefire, question government’s strategy

Northern Israelis criticize Lebanon ceasefire, question government’s strategy

Israel x Hezbollah Ceasefire

Northern Israelis slammed the Lebanon ceasefire, accusing the government of enabling future massacres. Netanyahu decided not to hold a Cabinet vote on the ceasefire, and traders are now reevaluating the likelihood of a confirmed deal with Hezbollah. The Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire by April 30 market sits at 99.2% YES, up from 45% a week ago.

The April 30 ceasefire market jumped from 59% to 72% in a single spike. The June 30 odds are higher still at 99.6% YES, meaning traders expect a resolution by mid-year. But opposition from northern Israelis points to internal resistance that could drag these probabilities down.

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The market for Israel’s suspension of the Lebanon offensive by April 30 is at 99.4% YES, up from 87% a day ago. This spike tracks with expectations of a short-term pause in operations, but Netanyahu’s reluctance to formalize the ceasefire raises questions about longer-term de-escalation.

USDC volume across the Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire markets totals $1.2M daily. Order book depth shows $50,093 needed to move the April 30 ceasefire market five points, a thick book. The largest single move was a 13-point spike.

Northern Israeli opposition matters because it exposes a fracture in domestic support for the ceasefire strategy. If concerns about renewed Hezbollah attacks prove justified, odds of a lasting ceasefire could fall. At 6¢, a NO share for the June 30 ceasefire pays $1 if the ceasefire doesn’t hold, a 16.67x return. That bet only makes sense if you believe domestic opposition will stall any lasting peace deal.

Watch for statements from Netanyahu or the IDF clarifying the ceasefire’s scope. A shift in language from the Defense Ministry could move these markets fast.

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.