WTI Crude Oil hitting $160 in April trades at 1.4% YES on Polymarket, unchanged from 24 hours ago despite renewed US-Iran tensions.
Market reaction
Traders have held the 1.4% YES odds steady, though the contract spiked to 26% briefly after a large order last week. The low price signals skepticism about immediate surges despite the geopolitical friction. Markets for crude oil prices by June show no visible trading activity.
Why it matters
The underlying data tells the story. The WTI Crude Oil market has a daily trading face value of $72,164, but actual USDC traded is just $704, meaning liquidity is thin. It would take only $1,655 to move the price by 5 percentage points. A few large orders can swing the odds significantly, as the 25-point spike last week demonstrated.
Tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, through which a large share of global oil transits, could in theory spike prices. But the market is barely moving. A YES share at 1.4% costs 1¢, paying $1 if it resolves, a 71x return. That payout requires a massive and immediate escalation that traders are clearly not pricing in.
What to watch
US or Iranian military actions, diplomatic breakthroughs, or significant OPEC+ production decisions. Any of these could move the contract sharply given how little liquidity it takes to shift the odds.
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