Iran rejects nuclear limits, seeks sanctions relief and Strait of Hormuz reopening

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Iran has rejected nuclear limits in ceasefire talks, prioritizing sanctions relief and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. The odds of Iran agreeing to end uranium enrichment by April 30 have dropped to 3.6% YES, down from 50% a week ago.

Market reaction

This explicit stance from Iran kills any near-term prospect of a nuclear agreement. Traders are pricing in the near-impossibility of Iran backing down on enrichment without major concessions. The April 30 market has only 6 days left to resolve.

Volume over the last 24 hours was $4,778 in actual USDC traded, despite the face value being reported at $88,913. It takes $2,529 to move this market by 5 percentage points, so liquidity is thin but present. The largest move was a modest 2-point spike, suggesting traders aren’t betting heavily on a reversal.

Why it matters

Iran’s hardline position on nuclear issues means the current negotiations will stay stalled unless the US changes its approach. With sanctions relief as Iran’s main focus, the Trump Iran Demands market could see movement if the US concedes to these demands due to global oil pressures.

What to watch

For traders, the Iran uranium enrichment market at 3.6% YES offers a large payout if an agreement somehow materializes. A YES share at 3.6¢ pays $1 if it resolves, a 27.8x return. That would require a breakthrough within the next week.

Watch for any moves from Trump or the IAEA. Specifically, any US statements on sanctions changes or Iranian compliance would directly affect this market.

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