Hezbollah’s Qassem rejects talks with Israel, vows response to aggression

2 hours ago 1



Hezbollah’s Naim Qassem has rejected negotiations with Israel and promised a response to what he called Israeli aggression. The Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire extension market for April 26, 2026 sits at 99.8% YES, though Qassem’s rhetoric introduces a source of downside risk.

The Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire extension market has $3.1M in actual USDC traded daily, enough liquidity for rapid repricing if hostilities resume. At 99.8% YES, traders are overwhelmingly pricing in an extension, but Hezbollah’s public stance creates a gap between market confidence and on-the-ground signals.

Hezbollah’s aggressive posture could also affect the Netanyahu departure market. Odds of Netanyahu leaving office by June 30 are at 5.5% YES, down from 6% a day ago. Rising regional tensions tend to consolidate support around sitting Israeli leaders, which would push this number lower still.

Daily face value in the Netanyahu market is $293,308, and it takes $16,447 to move the odds 5 percentage points, a sign of strong trader conviction on both sides. The largest recent price move was a 44-point spike, showing how quickly geopolitical events can reprice this contract.

Qassem’s rejection of negotiations matters, but it doesn’t determine either Netanyahu’s political future or ceasefire outcomes on its own. A YES position on Netanyahu’s departure at 6¢ pays $1, a 16.6x return, but requires dramatic political change within 62 days.

Watch for follow-up Hezbollah statements or Israeli military actions. Escalation or a diplomatic shift could reprice both markets quickly.

Get prediction market intelligence as a structured API feed. Early access waitlist.

Read Entire Article