Traders' near-unanimous consensus against a Ukraine-Russia peace deal by March 31 stems from irreconcilable core demands: Ukraine insists on full Russian troop withdrawal and security guarantees, while Russia requires recognition of annexed territories like Crimea and Donbas plus Ukraine's permanent neutrality. No formal negotiations have resumed since early 2022 Istanbul talks, amid ongoing eastern front advances by Russian forces and Ukraine's ammunition shortages despite recent U.S. aid approvals. Post-inauguration diplomatic overtures from the Trump administration have yielded no breakthroughs, reinforcing the stalemate. Realistic shifts could arise from abrupt U.S.-brokered concessions or battlefield collapses, though these remain low-probability given the compressed timeline and historical negotiation failures.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedUkraine signs peace deal with Russia by March 31?
Ukraine signs peace deal with Russia by March 31?
$342,022 Vol.
$342,022 Vol.
$342,022 Vol.
$342,022 Vol.
Only Ukraine’s signature is required; Russia’s signature or ratification is not.
Localized, temporary, or issue-specific arrangements—such as airstrike-limitation or deconfliction protocols, humanitarian pauses, evacuation corridors, prisoner-exchange or trade/export arrangements, border/DMZ adjustments, or ceasefires limited to a particular sector/front/municipality—will not qualify.
The document must bear a wet-ink or officially issued electronic signature of an authorized Ukrainian representative. Unsigned agreements (e.g., the 2023 Ohrid arrangement) will not qualify regardless of if they are otherwise officially enacted.
The primary resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Nov 5, 2025, 12:56 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Only Ukraine’s signature is required; Russia’s signature or ratification is not.
Localized, temporary, or issue-specific arrangements—such as airstrike-limitation or deconfliction protocols, humanitarian pauses, evacuation corridors, prisoner-exchange or trade/export arrangements, border/DMZ adjustments, or ceasefires limited to a particular sector/front/municipality—will not qualify.
The document must bear a wet-ink or officially issued electronic signature of an authorized Ukrainian representative. Unsigned agreements (e.g., the 2023 Ohrid arrangement) will not qualify regardless of if they are otherwise officially enacted.
The primary resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Traders' near-unanimous consensus against a Ukraine-Russia peace deal by March 31 stems from irreconcilable core demands: Ukraine insists on full Russian troop withdrawal and security guarantees, while Russia requires recognition of annexed territories like Crimea and Donbas plus Ukraine's permanent neutrality. No formal negotiations have resumed since early 2022 Istanbul talks, amid ongoing eastern front advances by Russian forces and Ukraine's ammunition shortages despite recent U.S. aid approvals. Post-inauguration diplomatic overtures from the Trump administration have yielded no breakthroughs, reinforcing the stalemate. Realistic shifts could arise from abrupt U.S.-brokered concessions or battlefield collapses, though these remain low-probability given the compressed timeline and historical negotiation failures.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated
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