Iran attacks Indian tankers, disrupting Strait of Hormuz shipping

3 hours ago 17

Iran’s attack on two Indian tankers in the Strait of Hormuz has pushed the market for traffic returning to normal by May 31 to 15% YES, down from 40% earlier this week.

Market reaction

The Strait of Hormuz traffic market dropped sharply as Iran’s attack on neutral shipping cast doubt on any near-term return to normal transit volumes. With 41 days left until the May 31 deadline, the steepest decline came immediately after the attack, suggesting traders expect prolonged disruption rather than a one-off incident.

In a related market, predictions for crude oil hitting $90 by end of June now sit at 60% YES. That market jumped 15 points following the tanker attack as traders priced in potential supply disruptions through the strait.

Why it matters

The attack marks a significant escalation in the US-Israel-Iran conflict, directly threatening the shipping lane that handles a large share of global oil transit. The Strait of Hormuz market has recorded no volume in the past 24 hours, and the order book is thin enough that roughly $800 could move the price 5 percentage points. That makes the market susceptible to sharp swings from a single large trade.

What to watch

US-Iran ceasefire announcements, changes in IRGC transit policies, or diplomatic interventions would be the most likely catalysts for movement. The 41-day window to May 31 is short for the kind of de-escalation that would need to happen for traffic to normalize.

At 15¢, a YES share in the Strait of Hormuz traffic market pays $1 if traffic normalizes by May 31, a 6.67x return. That bet requires believing in rapid diplomatic progress within about six weeks.

Get prediction market intelligence as a structured API feed. Early access waitlist.

Read Entire Article