The first LNG shipment to exit the Strait of Hormuz since the 2026 Iran war began suggests a shift from blockade to controlled passage. The market on whether 80 ships will transit the strait on any single day by April 30 sits at 1% YES, down from 4% a day ago.
Market reaction
The shipment could indicate a softening stance by Iran, which has maintained strict control over the strait through the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). The 1% odds show traders remain skeptical of rapid normalization. Six days remain until market resolution, so any change in transit policies or increased ship movements could still shift the price.
Why it matters
The market for Strait of Hormuz traffic normalization by end of April is inactive, and the broader question of normalization by end of May also lacks active trading. Daily USDC volume for the April 30 transit market is $449, with only $542 required to move the price by five percentage points. At that volume, even minor news can swing prices, making this a market driven by sentiment rather than confirmed policy changes.
What to watch
For a contrarian bet, buying YES at 1¢ pays $1 if 80 ships transit by April 30, a 100x return. That bet requires rapid de-escalation, potentially triggered by IRGC announcements of escorted transits or U.S. Navy assurances of safe passage. Statements from U.S. Central Command or changes in IRGC toll policies are the most likely catalysts. Any confirmed increase in ship transits would move these odds fast given the thin liquidity.
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