US-Iran ceasefire by April 30 unlikely as conflict costs rise

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The US-Iran ceasefire by April 30 has dropped to 37.5% YES, down from 59% just 24 hours ago, as unaccounted costs from the ongoing conflict with Iran weigh on assessments of the US economy’s condition.

Traders in the US-Iran ceasefire market drove odds sharply lower as continued military operations and sabotage risks eat into ceasefire expectations. With only 12 days until April 30, the market prices in heavy skepticism that a formal cessation announcement will come. The diplomatic meeting market ticked up to 3.7% YES from 2% yesterday, meaning traders see a qualifying diplomatic meeting by June 30 as even less likely than before.

The ceasefire market traded $80,435 in USDC over the past 24 hours. The largest single move was a 4-point drop at 5:27 PM. The diplomatic meeting market is far thinner at just $400 in daily USDC volume, where a few large orders could move the price substantially.

The closed Strait of Hormuz and the broader economic toll of the conflict raise questions about US strategic and financial planning. No formal agreement exists, and continued hostilities point away from a near-term resolution. A YES share at 38¢ pays $1 if the ceasefire is announced by April 30, a 2.63x return. The slim chances of a diplomatic breakthrough sit against escalating costs with no clear ceiling.

Watch for announcements from the White House or intermediaries like Oman and Qatar, which could move odds quickly. Trump’s rhetoric and any military escalations are the other main variables.

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