Politics

Next Secretary-General of the United Nations

Rafael Grossi
$14K Vol.
50.5% 2%
Macky Sall
$114.35K Vol.
29.7% 0.5%
Rebeca Grynspan
$5.79K Vol.
15.5%
Michelle Bachelet
$7.36K Vol.
9.2% 0.1%

Current odds summary

Rafael Grossi currently leads the Next Secretary-General of the United Nations prediction market at 50.5% reported probability on Polymarket. The figures below combine live odds, liquidity, volume, and open interest so readers can compare the market signal before reading the full analysis.

Volume$141.51K Liquidity$23.7K Open Interest$6.05K Last updated6 mins ago

Odds, liquidity, volume, and open interest are sourced from Polymarket and last synced at Jul 18, 2026 6:03 pm.

CryptoSlate Market Analysis

Grossi’s Lead Prices Veto Survival Before the UN’s Real Test

The hierarchy centers on perceived Security Council acceptability, with Rafael Grossi carrying the clearest institutional profile and Macky Sall serving as the leading alternative. That ordering depends on untested assumptions about permanent-member objections, an incomplete quoted field, and coalition durability.

United Nations Headquarters in New York at dusk with international flags and an empty UN podium in the foreground.

Grossi’s advantage rests on perceived veto survivability

Rafael Grossi’s 49% price points to a specific market inference: his tenure as director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency gives him an established profile across governments that must manage sensitive security disputes. The decisive test is whether that visibility translates into acceptability among all five permanent Security Council members. The 193-member General Assembly appoints the secretary-general only after a Council recommendation, which requires majority support and no P5 veto.

Grossi was formally nominated by Argentina in November 2025. His IAEA term runs through December 2027, giving his candidacy institutional credibility while creating a hidden assumption about availability. The market hierarchy presumes he can campaign effectively, retain support for his current mandate, and avoid having IAEA controversies become proxies for opposition inside the Council. Those propositions have yet to face disclosed P5 vote-counting.

Sall’s second place functions as a coalition fallback

Macky Sall’s 30.6% price places him well ahead of Michelle Bachelet and Rebeca Grynspan, each at 13%. The available UN record confirms Sall is among six formally nominated candidates, although it supplies no public evidence of a decisive P5 commitment. His ranking therefore reads as a market inference that support could consolidate around him if Grossi encounters a permanent-member objection.

That interpretation contains two assumptions: Sall must remain acceptable across competing Council blocs, and the field must narrow in a way that directs support toward him. Either assumption could weaken if another candidate demonstrates broader Council backing. Conversely, diplomatic statements identifying Sall as an acceptable compromise, endorsements from withdrawing campaigns, or favorable Council straw-poll indications would give the second-place ranking firmer evidence.

The four quoted names leave coalition risk outside the hierarchy

The UN lists six formal nominees: Grossi, Sall, Bachelet, Grynspan, María Fernanda Espinosa, and Carolyn Rodrigues Birkett. The Polymarket event currently quotes only four of them. That gap matters because a candidate’s influence extends beyond winning; an unquoted campaign can divide regional or political support, survive into later rounds, or transfer backing after withdrawal.

The present ordering implicitly assumes Espinosa and Rodrigues Birkett will fail to become the main consensus option. That is unproven. A strong July presentation, new government sponsorship, or evidence of cross-regional Council support could alter that assumption. Additional nominations would create another source of coalition fragmentation. The $141,030 in volume shows meaningful engagement, while $6,030 of open interest suggests the durable exposure behind the ranking is smaller than cumulative turnover. That comparison limits how much conviction can be inferred from the current gap.

Bachelet’s sponsorship shows why nomination details can change prices

Chile withdrew its nomination of Bachelet on March 25, 2026, while UN records state that Brazil and Mexico continued to nominate her from that date. This preserved her formal candidacy while weakening the straightforward story of unified support from her home government. Her 13% price therefore depends on the inference that external sponsorship can sustain a viable diplomatic coalition.

Evidence of additional state sponsors or favorable P5 engagement would strengthen that case. Withdrawal by Brazil or Mexico, or public indications that Council members view Chile’s decision as disqualifying, would weaken it. Grynspan’s matching 13% price signals no clear market separation between the two campaigns, yet the supplied record provides insufficient evidence to attribute that parity to policy, geography, or personal support.

July moves the race from reputation to vote-counting

The candidates’ UN Town Hall on July 23, 2026 is the first scheduled event capable of changing public assessments across the full field. The more consequential stage follows in late July, when the Security Council is expected to discuss candidates behind closed doors. Public performance may shape diplomatic narratives; Council feedback tests whether those narratives survive veto politics.

Grossi’s lead would gain support from continued candidacy, favorable Council indications, and an absence of P5 objections. A disclosed permanent-member objection would directly challenge the thesis behind his position. Comparable signals favoring Sall or an unquoted nominee could reorder the field quickly. The market closes on December 31, 2026, the final day of António Guterres’s term, with the successor expected to begin January 1, 2027. The main counter-signal is therefore procedural: until Council preferences emerge, the hierarchy measures reputational plausibility more clearly than demonstrated appointability.

Sources

Market details

Resolution criteria
A selection process is currently being held to choose the next Secretary-General of the United Nations, with the current term set to end on 31 December 2026.
Platform
Category
Politics
Close date
December 31, 2026, 12:00 AM UTC
Market rules summary
Multi-outcome Polymarket event. Each listed option is represented by its Yes price on the underlying market. View full rules

Frequently asked questions

What are the current Next Secretary-General of the United Nations odds?

Polymarket reports Next Secretary-General of the United Nations odds with Rafael Grossi at 50.5%, Macky Sall at 29.7%, Rebeca Grynspan at 15.5%, and Michelle Bachelet at 9.2%. These probabilities are market-implied and can change as liquidity and trading activity update. The latest market snapshot includes $141.51K volume, $23.7K liquidity, and $6.05K open interest. CryptoSlate last synced this market data at Jul 18, 2026, 17:03 UTC.

How does the Next Secretary-General of the United Nations prediction market resolve?

A selection process is currently being held to choose the next Secretary-General of the United Nations, with the current term set to end on 31 December 2026. Multi-outcome Polymarket event. Each listed option is represented by its Yes price on the underlying market.