Iran’s erratic stance on Hormuz raises doubts about reliability in talks

3 hours ago 12

Lisa Daftari’s analysis calls out Iran’s erratic position on the Strait of Hormuz, questioning its reliability as a negotiating partner. WTI Crude Oil hitting $160 in April sits at 1.4% YES, while diplomatic meetings with Iran by April 30 are at 10.6% YES.

Market reaction

Iran’s contradictory signals on Hormuz have done little to move the WTI crude market. The likelihood of a price spike to $160 remains low despite the geopolitical noise. The market’s largest recent move was a 25-point spike that didn’t hold, suggesting caution rather than panic among traders.

On the diplomatic side, odds for a Trump-Iran meeting have dropped from 22% to 13%. Traders appear skeptical of any imminent talks given Iran’s unpredictable posture and internal divisions. A recent 6-point spike was short-lived, with traders quickly pulling back expectations.

Why it matters

With $2,814 in USDC traded on WTI and $20,106 on diplomatic meetings, both markets have drawn real money but show limited confidence in major shifts. The WTI market’s order book is thin ($1,655 to move 5 points), making it vulnerable to large trades. The diplomatic meeting market is even thinner at $283 to shift odds.

What to watch

At 1.4¢, a YES share for WTI crude hitting $160 offers a 71x return, but that bet requires a drastic escalation scenario. A diplomatic meeting by April 30 at 13¢ pays $1 (a 7.7x return) but depends on a breakthrough within 12 days. Key triggers: escalated military activity in the Strait of Hormuz, White House announcements on diplomatic engagement, or any shift in rhetoric from Trump or Iran’s Supreme Leader. Any of these could move both markets sharply.

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