Trader consensus on Peru's 2026 presidential election first-round second place reflects a highly fragmented field, with Enrique Valderrama, Fernando Olivera, and Mario Vizcarra clustered at 36.5%-35.5% implied probabilities amid scattered support for over a dozen candidates. Early polling averages from firms like Ipsos and Datum show no dominant runner-up behind frontrunners, as anti-incumbent sentiment boosts lesser-known outsiders while established figures like Keiko Fujimori lag at 29%. This tightness stems from vote-splitting across ideological lines in a volatile political landscape marked by corruption scandals and economic pressures. Separation could arise from fresh national polls, high-profile endorsements, candidate withdrawals, or economic shocks ahead of formal campaigning in late 2025.
Polymarketデータを参照したAI生成の実験的な要約 · 更新日José Luna 37%
Enrique Valderrama 37%
Roberto Sánchez Palomino 37%
Yonhy Lescano 37%

José Luna
37%

Enrique Valderrama
37%

Roberto Sánchez Palomino
37%

Yonhy Lescano
37%

Rafael Belaúnde Llosa
36%

George Forsyth
36%

César Acuña
36%

Carlos Álvarez
36%

Roberto Chiabra
36%

Fernando Olivera
36%

Wolfgang Grozo
36%

Mario Vizcarra
36%

Marisol Pérez Tello
36%

Carlos Espá
34%

José Williams
34%

Mesías Guevara
33%

Jorge Nieto
33%

Fiorella Molinelli
33%

Vladimir Cerrón
32%

Ricardo Belmont
32%

Keiko Fujimori
30%

Alfonso López Chau
29%

Rafael López Aliaga
29%
José Luna 37%
Enrique Valderrama 37%
Roberto Sánchez Palomino 37%
Yonhy Lescano 37%

José Luna
37%

Enrique Valderrama
37%

Roberto Sánchez Palomino
37%

Yonhy Lescano
37%

Rafael Belaúnde Llosa
36%

George Forsyth
36%

César Acuña
36%

Carlos Álvarez
36%

Roberto Chiabra
36%

Fernando Olivera
36%

Wolfgang Grozo
36%

Mario Vizcarra
36%

Marisol Pérez Tello
36%

Carlos Espá
34%

José Williams
34%

Mesías Guevara
33%

Jorge Nieto
33%

Fiorella Molinelli
33%

Vladimir Cerrón
32%

Ricardo Belmont
32%

Keiko Fujimori
30%

Alfonso López Chau
29%

Rafael López Aliaga
29%
This market will resolve according to the listed candidate who receives the second-most valid votes in the first round of this election.
The named candidates will be primarily ranked by the number of valid votes received in the specified election. If two or more candidates are tied on valid votes, ties will be broken by alphabetical order of the candidates' last names. This market will resolve to the candidate that occupies the second-highest finishing position after applying this ranking.
If the results are not known definitively by October 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to "Other".
This market will resolve based on the results of this election, as indicated by a consensus of credible reporting. If there is ambiguity, this market will resolve solely on the official results as reported by the Peruvian government, specifically the National Office of Electoral Processes (Oficina Nacional de Procesos Electorales, ONPE) (https://www.onpe.gob.pe/elecciones/) and the National Jury of Elections (Jurado Nacional de Elecciones, JNE) (https://portal.jne.gob.pe/portal/)
マーケット開始日: Mar 20, 2026, 10:30 AM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Trader consensus on Peru's 2026 presidential election first-round second place reflects a highly fragmented field, with Enrique Valderrama, Fernando Olivera, and Mario Vizcarra clustered at 36.5%-35.5% implied probabilities amid scattered support for over a dozen candidates. Early polling averages from firms like Ipsos and Datum show no dominant runner-up behind frontrunners, as anti-incumbent sentiment boosts lesser-known outsiders while established figures like Keiko Fujimori lag at 29%. This tightness stems from vote-splitting across ideological lines in a volatile political landscape marked by corruption scandals and economic pressures. Separation could arise from fresh national polls, high-profile endorsements, candidate withdrawals, or economic shocks ahead of formal campaigning in late 2025.
Polymarketデータを参照したAI生成の実験的な要約 · 更新日
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