President Trump's January announcement of a "framework of a future deal" with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on Greenland security, mineral rights, and military access—following tariff threats—has anchored trader consensus at 59.5% implied probability for a formal bilateral agreement signed by December 31, viewing it as tangible diplomatic progress without sovereignty transfer. Denmark and Greenland maintain firm opposition to any sale, but March 19 remarks from Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen confirmed ongoing talks amid her national election, where U.S. pressure factored prominently. With shorter-term Polymarket contracts like March 31 resolving No due to absent binding documents, the year-end odds balance Trump's foreign policy leverage through NATO alliances and executive actions against procedural hurdles and local resistance, with U.S. lawmakers eyeing Denmark visits to advance negotiations.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$42,901 Vol.
$42,901 Vol.
$42,901 Vol.
$42,901 Vol.
Any U.S.–Danish agreement relating to Greenland will qualify, regardless of subject matter, including but not limited to sovereignty, governance, security arrangements, or access to natural resources.
Examples of qualifying deals include but are not limited to a treaty that makes any portion of Greenland a U.S. territory or possession (even if the handover date for such territory or possession is later); or, a Guantánamo-style arrangement treaty establishing a defined zone in Greenland under exclusive or primary U.S. jurisdiction and control, where Denmark and Greenland’s ordinary legal authority does not apply except by U.S. permission; or agreements permitting additional U.S. troop stationing, basing access, or resource extraction rights in Greenland.
This market will resolve to “Yes” only if a qualifying agreement is formally signed by authorized representatives of both Denmark and the United States. Official announcements, statements of intent, or declarations that an agreement has been reached will not suffice unless accompanied by signatures from both sides. Whether or not a qualifying deal is later passed by the respective parliaments or enters into force will not affect this market’s resolution. Signaling from Greenland’s population will not be considered.
Announcements, negotiations, proposals, frameworks, or understandings that are not formally signed by both parties will not qualify. Any qualifying U.S. jurisdiction, control, basing rights, or access arrangements in Greenland that existed at market creation will not count as new qualifying agreements.
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from the governments of the United States and Denmark; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Market Opened: Jan 21, 2026, 5:59 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Any U.S.–Danish agreement relating to Greenland will qualify, regardless of subject matter, including but not limited to sovereignty, governance, security arrangements, or access to natural resources.
Examples of qualifying deals include but are not limited to a treaty that makes any portion of Greenland a U.S. territory or possession (even if the handover date for such territory or possession is later); or, a Guantánamo-style arrangement treaty establishing a defined zone in Greenland under exclusive or primary U.S. jurisdiction and control, where Denmark and Greenland’s ordinary legal authority does not apply except by U.S. permission; or agreements permitting additional U.S. troop stationing, basing access, or resource extraction rights in Greenland.
This market will resolve to “Yes” only if a qualifying agreement is formally signed by authorized representatives of both Denmark and the United States. Official announcements, statements of intent, or declarations that an agreement has been reached will not suffice unless accompanied by signatures from both sides. Whether or not a qualifying deal is later passed by the respective parliaments or enters into force will not affect this market’s resolution. Signaling from Greenland’s population will not be considered.
Announcements, negotiations, proposals, frameworks, or understandings that are not formally signed by both parties will not qualify. Any qualifying U.S. jurisdiction, control, basing rights, or access arrangements in Greenland that existed at market creation will not count as new qualifying agreements.
The primary resolution source for this market will be official information from the governments of the United States and Denmark; however, a consensus of credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...President Trump's January announcement of a "framework of a future deal" with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on Greenland security, mineral rights, and military access—following tariff threats—has anchored trader consensus at 59.5% implied probability for a formal bilateral agreement signed by December 31, viewing it as tangible diplomatic progress without sovereignty transfer. Denmark and Greenland maintain firm opposition to any sale, but March 19 remarks from Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen confirmed ongoing talks amid her national election, where U.S. pressure factored prominently. With shorter-term Polymarket contracts like March 31 resolving No due to absent binding documents, the year-end odds balance Trump's foreign policy leverage through NATO alliances and executive actions against procedural hurdles and local resistance, with U.S. lawmakers eyeing Denmark visits to advance negotiations.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated



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