US oil exports rise amid Israel-Iran conflict, shifting global supply patterns

1 hour ago 20

U.S. oil exports are increasing during the ongoing U.S.-Israel war with Iran, shifting global supply patterns. The market for WTI Crude Oil hitting $160 in April sits at 0% YES, reflecting expected price pressures from the Strait of Hormuz blockade.

Market reaction

The crude oil all-time high by April 30 market is at 1.1% YES, down from 2% yesterday. Even with the blockade tightening supply, traders remain skeptical about hitting new price peaks within the next six days. The market trades $100,828 in face value daily, though only $2,513 in real USDC, a thin liquidity profile that makes it vulnerable to large orders.

Why it matters

The Strait of Hormuz traffic normalization market remains inactive. With Iranian forces reinstating the blockade and the ceasefire in jeopardy, normalization by month’s end seems unlikely.

Increased U.S. exports during wartime demand boost leverage against sanctioned exporters but also heighten price volatility. The current odds suggest skepticism around immediate spikes. A YES share at 1.1¢ for crude oil hitting an all-time high pays $1, a 90.9x return, contingent on an improbable surge.

What to watch

Watch for Trump’s next Defense Production Act actions or any OPEC+ announcements. These could move the odds sharply, especially if strategic reserves or production quotas shift.

API access

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

Read Entire Article