Iran accuses US of ceasefire violations, raising conflict risk

2 hours ago 1



Iran’s Foreign Ministry accused the US of ceasefire violations, including a ship attack and port blockade, saying they obstruct diplomacy. The market for a ceasefire by April 30 dropped to 34.5% YES, down from 59% yesterday.

Market reaction

The statement hit multiple related markets. Odds for Trump declaring the ceasefire broken by April 21 jumped to 18%, up from 8% a day ago. The ceasefire extension market fell to 34.5% YES from 86% yesterday. Across these contracts, traders are pricing in continued military operations rather than a formalized end to hostilities.

Total USDC traded in the ceasefire market was $80,435, with only $1,566 needed to move the price 5 percentage points, so the market is thin. The largest move was a 4-point drop at 5:27 PM, likely a concentrated sell-off reacting to the Iranian statement.

Why it matters

Iran’s accusation marks a real diplomatic setback. With a fragile truce already in place, this kind of rhetoric raises the probability of renewed conflict. For contrarian traders, buying YES at 34.5¢ pays $1 if military operations end by April 30, a 2.63x return. But given Iran’s hardline stance, a quick resolution looks unlikely without substantive diplomatic progress.

What to watch

CENTCOM statements or Trump social media posts signaling changes in military posture. The ceasefire expires soon, and any new military actions or diplomatic initiatives will move these markets.

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