Event

Israel x Iran permanent peace deal by...?

6 markets in this event family · $437.9K 24h volume · $81.4K liquidity. Share the URL anywhere — the rich preview card shows the cluster's biggest mover with one glance.

GeopoliticsMay 31, 2026advancing 2 · declining 2
24h volume

$426.7K

6 markets · liq $80.3K

Avg volatility

1.7pp

Mean |24h move|

Top movers

1

Markets ≥5pp 24h

Whale flow

$0.00

0 trades ≥$5k

Source-risk

0

Active UMA dispute / pending

Resolving <24h

0

Settlement positioning risk

Top mover · 24h

Israel x Iran permanent peace deal by May 31, 2026?
15¢+6.8pp 24hVol $391.2K · Liq $48.4K

About this event

This market will resolve to “Yes” if Israel and Iran agree to a permanent peace deal by the specified date, 11:59 PM ET. Otherwise, this market will resolve to “No”. A permanent peace deal refers to any agreement which explicitly indicates that military hostilities between Israel and Iran have ended or will permanently cease, or uses equivalent language clearly signaling a lasting end to military hostilities between Israel and Iran. Agreements that are explicitly temporary or which do not include a definitive agreement to end military hostilities between Israel and Iran on a lasting basis (e.g. a temporary extension of a previously announced ceasefire agreement), will not qualify. A qualifying agreement will be considered to have been established if either of the following conditions are met: - Israel and Iran each sign or formally adopt a written agreement (e.g. a treaty or multi-point agreement) which meets the above criteria. - Both Israel and Iran provide clear public confirmation that a qualifying agreement has been definitively established. Negotiations, statements of progress, or other statements which do not constitute a definitive announcement that a qualifying agreement has been reached will not count. The inclusion of Israel and Iran in a qualifying peace deal between multiple parties will qualify. The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from the governments of Israel and Iran; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.