Trader consensus favors no new country joining the Abraham Accords by June 30 at 81.5%, reflecting stalled diplomatic progress amid unmet preconditions from leading candidate Saudi Arabia. Riyadh continues to link normalization with Israel to U.S. security guarantees, civilian nuclear cooperation, and concrete steps toward Palestinian statehood—conditions unfulfilled as of late April 2026, per recent reporting. While defense-industrial ties have deepened among existing signatories like the UAE and Bahrain since March, no official announcements or summits signal imminent expansion. Kazakhstan's November 2025 entry marked the last addition, but regional tensions and procedural hurdles leave little runway for another before the deadline, underscoring the wisdom of crowds in pricing geopolitical risks.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated$23,877 Vol.
$23,877 Vol.
$23,877 Vol.
$23,877 Vol.
A formal signing refers to an official agreement between Israel and another country that is publicly acknowledged by both governments and clearly attributed to the Abraham Accords or their continuation. Such a signing will qualify regardless of whether a country had an established diplomatic relationship with Israel predating this event; their becoming a signatory of the Abraham Accords qualifies as normalizing relations under the framework of that agreement.
For the purposes of this market, Somaliland will count as a country.
Countries already part of the Abraham Accords as of June 26, 2025—including the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan—will not count.
The resolution source will be official government statements, however a consensus for credible reporting may also be used.
Market Opened: Apr 1, 2026, 2:04 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...A formal signing refers to an official agreement between Israel and another country that is publicly acknowledged by both governments and clearly attributed to the Abraham Accords or their continuation. Such a signing will qualify regardless of whether a country had an established diplomatic relationship with Israel predating this event; their becoming a signatory of the Abraham Accords qualifies as normalizing relations under the framework of that agreement.
For the purposes of this market, Somaliland will count as a country.
Countries already part of the Abraham Accords as of June 26, 2025—including the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan—will not count.
The resolution source will be official government statements, however a consensus for credible reporting may also be used.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus favors no new country joining the Abraham Accords by June 30 at 81.5%, reflecting stalled diplomatic progress amid unmet preconditions from leading candidate Saudi Arabia. Riyadh continues to link normalization with Israel to U.S. security guarantees, civilian nuclear cooperation, and concrete steps toward Palestinian statehood—conditions unfulfilled as of late April 2026, per recent reporting. While defense-industrial ties have deepened among existing signatories like the UAE and Bahrain since March, no official announcements or summits signal imminent expansion. Kazakhstan's November 2025 entry marked the last addition, but regional tensions and procedural hurdles leave little runway for another before the deadline, underscoring the wisdom of crowds in pricing geopolitical risks.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated



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