Poland urges EU to release €90B Ukraine loan after Orbán ousted

2 hours ago 1



Poland’s Finance Minister Andrzej Domański called on the EU to release a €90 billion loan to Ukraine following Viktor Orbán’s removal from power. The Russia-Ukraine ceasefire by May 31, 2026 market on Polymarket sits at 5.2%, down from 6% a week ago.

Market reaction

Orbán’s ousting removes what had been a consistent veto threat against EU financial aid to Ukraine. Yet the Russia-Ukraine ceasefire by May 31 market dropped rather than rose, trading at 5.2%. With only 45 days until the contract’s resolution date, traders appear to read increased EU financial commitment to Ukraine as extending the war rather than shortening it. Daily trading volume is $1,254 in USDC, with $2,993 needed to move the price 5 points, which indicates moderate liquidity. The next Prime Minister of Hungary market is also in play after Péter Magyar’s Tisza party secured a supermajority.

Why it matters

More EU money flowing to Ukraine changes the military calculus. If Kyiv can count on €90 billion in new financing, its negotiating position strengthens, which could make a near-term ceasefire either more or less likely depending on Russia’s response. The price decline from 6% to 5.2% suggests traders currently lean toward “less likely” within this tight window. Ongoing military operations on both sides reinforce that read.

What to watch

Official EU decisions on the loan release timeline, and any direct diplomatic contact between Putin, Zelenskyy, or Trump. Either could move this market sharply. At 5.2¢, a YES share pays $1 if a ceasefire is announced by May 31, a potential 19x return. That payout requires believing major diplomatic progress happens within 45 days.

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