US deploys sea drones for mine clearance in Strait of Hormuz

2 hours ago 1



The U.S. military has deployed sea drones to clear mines in the Strait of Hormuz, and the market on whether 80 ships will transit the strait on any day by April 30 has moved to 27% YES, up from 18% a week ago.

Market reaction

Traders have pushed odds up 4.5 points over the past week on the de-escalation signal. The April 30 deadline is 12 days away. The market has $16,360 in daily USDC volume, and it takes only $797 to move the price by 5 points, which points to thin but real liquidity around this contract.

Why it matters

The operation is part of Operation Epic Fury, which prioritizes reopening commercial shipping lanes over direct military confrontation. A shaky ceasefire is in place, and the shift to drone-based mine clearance represents a more controlled approach to de-escalation. The main risk: Iranian attacks on clearance assets could stall or reverse progress before the deadline.

What to watch

A YES share priced at 27¢ pays $1 if resolved, a 4.5x return. The bet requires the U.S. to complete mine clearance without incident and the strait to reopen with enough traffic to hit 80 ships in a single day. Watch for updates from Admiral Brad Cooper at U.S. Central Command, particularly any announcement that mine-clearing operations are complete. That would be the most direct catalyst for this contract.

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