Pakistan mediates US-Iran peace talks as ceasefire deadline looms

3 hours ago 14

Pakistan is attempting to mediate another round of US-Iran peace talks in Islamabad, following last weekend’s failed negotiations and days before a temporary ceasefire expires on April 22. The market for Trump announcing a ceasefire breach by April 21 is at 12%, down from 62% a week ago.

Market reaction

The April 21 ceasefire breach market has dropped 50 points in a week, with traders pricing in a much lower probability of collapse. The US-Iran permanent peace deal by April 22 market sits at 16.5%. The term structure tells a clearer story: odds for a permanent deal jump to 67.5% by June 30, suggesting traders expect a deal but not on this timeline.

Why it matters

The uranium stockpile surrender market is moving in parallel. The April 30 sub-market is at 29%, a modest increase that tracks with the renewed diplomatic push. These markets are connected: a permanent deal almost certainly requires some resolution on enriched uranium.

What to watch

Liquidity is thin. In the ceasefire market, only $2,291 of the $18,515 face value has traded in the last 24 hours, and $2,889 would be enough to move the price. Large orders could cause sharp swings.

Buying YES shares in the ceasefire breach market at 12¢ pays $1 if Trump announces a breach by April 21, an 8.3x return. That bet requires believing diplomacy collapses within 5 days. Watch for statements from Islamabad by April 22 and any Pentagon or White House announcements that could shift odds quickly.

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