The British Ambassador to Washington announced plans to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, deploying ships and drones to ensure navigation security. The market for UK warships transiting the Strait by April 30 sits at 1.2% YES, down from 12% a week ago.
Market reaction
Odds for warships transiting by April 30 are at 1.2%, suggesting traders see the ambassador’s statement as aspirational rather than operational. Iran’s threats and previous IRGC vessel seizures likely feed that skepticism. The April 30 resolution date is six days away, leaving almost no time for deployment.
The market trades $11,264 in face value daily, but actual dollars exchanged amount to just $233. Only $783 is needed to move the price five points. The largest recorded price move was a 0.8% drop, with more traders betting against a quick transit than for one.
Why it matters
The ambassador’s statement is a diplomatic signal, but without confirmed deployments or coalition partners, the gap between rhetoric and action remains wide. At 1.2¢ for a YES share, a correct bet pays $1, a 83.3x return. That payout requires believing the UK can go from announcement to warship transit in under a week.
What to watch
Official statements from the UK Ministry of Defence or any allied naval movements in the region. Either would be the clearest signal that this moves from diplomatic posture to operational reality, and the thin liquidity means even modest new information could move the price fast.
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