Event

US x Iran permanent peace deal by...?

12 markets in this event family · $887.2K 24h volume · $1.8M liquidity. Share the URL anywhere — the rich preview card shows the cluster's biggest mover with one glance.

IranDec 31, 2026advancing 0 · declining 11
24h volume

$885.8K

12 markets · liq $1.8M

Avg volatility

1.0pp

Mean |24h move|

Top movers

0

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

US x Iran permanent peace deal by December 31, 2026?
62¢-3.5pp 24hVol $149.7K · Liq $257.0K

All markets in this cluster

12

About this event

This market will resolve to “Yes” if Iran and the United states 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 the United States and Iran have ended or will permanently cease, or uses equivalent language clearly signaling a lasting end to military hostilities between the United States and Iran. Agreements that are explicitly temporary or which do not include a definitive agreement to end military hostilities between the US and Iran on a lasting basis (e.g. a temporary extension of the two-week ceasefire agreement announced on April 7, 2026), will not qualify. A qualifying agreement will be considered to have been established if either of the following conditions are met: - The United States and Iran each sign or formally adopt a written agreement (e.g. a treaty or multi-point agreement) which meets the above criteria. - Both the governments of the United States 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 primary resolution source for this market will be official information from the governments of the United States and Iran; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.