Iran asserts control over Strait of Hormuz, complicating US uranium talks

2 hours ago 1



Iran claims military authority over the Strait of Hormuz as tensions with the US remain high. This directly affects the market for US acquisition of Iranian enriched uranium, where odds for a May 31 resolution dropped to 6.5% YES, down from 12% yesterday.

Market reaction

Traders sold positions on a successful US uranium acquisition after Iran’s hardened stance. The May 31 sub-market fell from 12% to 6.5% YES today. The April 30 market sits at 0.4% YES, pricing in near-zero probability of a diplomatic resolution in the next few weeks.

The largest single price move was a one-point drop at 7:59 PM, showing trader sensitivity to geopolitical signals. The term structure tells a different story further out: the December 31 market trades at 27.5% YES, suggesting traders see potential catalysts for uranium acquisition later in the year.

Why it matters

Volume at $18,780 in USDC over the last 24 hours is enough to reflect genuine sentiment, but it takes just $15,480 to move the May 31 market by 5 points. That thin liquidity means a few large trades could cause sharp swings.

Iran’s claim over the Strait of Hormuz makes diplomatic negotiations harder and reduces the probability of a uranium handover by May 31. A YES share at 7¢ pays $1 if a deal is struck by the end of May, a 14.3x return. That payout requires a major diplomatic breakthrough in the next 37 days.

What to watch

Statements from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) or any signs of US-Iran back-channel negotiations. A shift in Iran’s position or US diplomatic overtures could reprice these contracts quickly.

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