Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Iran will fulfill its commitments if the United States abides by their mutual understanding, a conditional pledge that comes as Polymarket traders price a 45.5% probability of a final nuclear deal by Dec. 31, 2026.
"Mutual understanding is a two-way street. If the American side adheres to the agreement, we will also fulfill our commitments," Pezeshkian posted on X on June 30, according to state media. The president added that Iran's approach to "unreasonable saber-rattling and baseless threats" is to rely on rationality and human dignity while defending "decisively and fearlessly" when necessary. The statement stops short of committing to any near-term diplomatic engagement — Iran's foreign ministry spokesperson said days earlier there would be no Iran-US talks in the coming days.
Polymarket's US-Iran Final Nuclear Deal by…? ladder shows $3.38 million in matched volume, with the December 31, 2026 rung at Yes 45.5% versus No 54.5%. Shorter timelines trade at materially lower probabilities: September 30 sits at 28.5%, August 31 at 23.5%, and July 31 at just 3.25%. The odds on a December deal have risen 20 percentage points over the past 24 hours and 7 days, reflecting a sharp repricing as traders weigh mixed signals — Iran's conditional openness against escalating military rhetoric from multiple fronts.
The conditional pledge comes against a backdrop of heightened regional friction. Israel Defense Minister Israel Katz said on June 27 that Israel would use "force" against Iran if it prevents implementation of a Lebanon deal. Separately, Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed responsibility for missile and drone strikes targeting US military positions in Kuwait and Bahrain, warning it may terminate the existing Iran-US agreement due to alleged ceasefire violations. The Strait of Hormuz remains a focal point for traders: Polymarket's contract on whether traffic returns to normal by July 15 prices "No" at 81.5% with $5.08 million in volume, while the July 31 version shows "No" at 61.5% on $10.83 million.
What a nuclear deal would mean for markets
A finalized agreement could unlock significant shifts in global energy markets. Iran, a major oil producer, has been under tight sanctions that have constrained its exports. The International Energy Agency estimates Iran holds roughly 9% of global oil reserves, and a deal could add 1 million to 1.5 million barrels per day of supply within 12 to 18 months, potentially pressuring Brent crude prices. The last time a similar diplomatic window opened — during the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action negotiations — Brent crude fell roughly 15% over the six months following the framework agreement, according to data from the US Energy Information Administration.
The conditional nature of Pezeshkian's statement creates a binary scenario for traders. If Washington reciprocates with concrete adherence to the understanding document, the probability of a late-2026 deal could rise further, compressing the risk premium priced into crude and shipping contracts. If talks stall or military escalation resumes, Polymarket's ladder suggests traders will continue clustering around later deadlines — the December 31 rung remains the only line above 30% — while hedging against tail risks such as Iran leadership change, which the platform prices at 15% by year-end with $18.9 million in volume.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.