Pakistan’s diplomatic push to salvage US-Iran talks has driven down ceasefire odds. The market for Trump announcing the end of military operations against Iran by April 30 sits at 16.5% YES, down from 32% yesterday.
Market reaction
Traders are treating Pakistan’s intervention as unlikely to produce results, with odds falling sharply rather than rising on the news. A week ago, the April 30 ceasefire market was at 38%, meaning confidence has been cut by more than half as the deadline approaches. With only 9 days until resolution, the price decline suggests traders see the remaining window as too short for Pakistan to broker an agreement between two sides that remain far apart.
Why it matters
Trading volume tells the story: $68,607 in USDC traded in the last 24 hours, leveraging $213,788 in face value. Order book depth is $4,074 to move 5 points, which means moderate liquidity vulnerable to larger orders. The biggest price move was a 5-point spike at 6:59 PM, showing how reactive this market is to incoming news.
What to watch
The contrarian play is buying YES at 17¢, which pays $1 if a ceasefire is declared, a 5.88x return. That bet requires believing Pakistan can close a deal in 9 days while both sides remain entrenched. Watch for CENTCOM statements and any intermediary activity from Oman or Qatar. Any shift in Trump’s rhetoric toward conciliatory language would likely move this market fast.
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