Iran pulls out of Islamabad peace talks, ceasefire extension uncertain

2 hours ago 2



Pakistan’s Prime Minister is keeping peace talk plans alive in Islamabad despite Iran pulling out, and the odds for a ceasefire extension by April 21, 2026, have dropped to 64% YES, down from 86% a day ago.

Market reaction

Traders moved fast. The April 21 ceasefire announcement market now sits at 18% YES, up from 8% yesterday. The odds of a permanent peace deal by April 22 have dropped to 15.5% YES, halved from 40% just 24 hours prior. The ceasefire extension market has $82,767 in USDC traded and requires $9,463 to move the price five points, so it’s liquid but reactive. The largest recent move was a 4-point drop after Iran’s withdrawal became public.

Why it matters

Iran’s refusal to attend talks in Islamabad is bad for both short-term ceasefire extensions and long-term peace deals. Without Iran at the table, the trajectory shifts from de-escalation toward renewed hostilities, especially given Trump’s threats of resumed bombing. At 36¢, a YES share in the April 30 peace deal market pays $1 if resolved, a 2.78x return, but that would require a diplomatic reversal that nothing currently points to.

What to watch

Trump’s statements and any Iranian media signals. A last-minute change, such as Iran returning to the table or Pakistan mediating a breakthrough, could move these markets sharply in either direction.

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