No, it would be far more likely that speciation would eventually take place. It's highly unlikely that it wouldn't - but not strictly impossible.
Why? Given the random nature (in our experiment) of mutations, there is an equal chance that mutation will reach 1 or that mutation will reach 0 (where 1 and 0 are measures of 'closeness' to other members of the same species, with 1 being a new species and 0 being exactly the same as another member of the species). Say a mutation, with a 1x10^-8 chance of happening, occured which moved the organism from 0 to 0.1. There is an equal chance for the organism to move back to 0 given another random mutation, as there is that the organism will move from 0.1 to 0.2. ("Organism" in this sense I suppose being a transfered genetic code passed on to children).