US-Iran talks stall, oil prices rise on Strait of Hormuz supply fears

2 hours ago 1



US-Iran talks in Pakistan have shown little progress, pushing oil prices higher on fears of supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz. The Polymarket contract for WTI Crude Oil hitting $160 in April is priced at 1% YES.

Market reaction

Trading volume is thin: $640 in daily USDC trading against a face value of $39,483. The order book depth shows it would take $2,189 to move the price by five percentage points, meaning a single large order could shift the market substantially. At 1¢ per YES share, the contract implies a 100x return if WTI actually reaches $160.

Why it matters

Roughly 20% of global oil supply passes through the Strait of Hormuz, and Iran controls its northern shore. The stalled negotiations raise the probability of disruptions to that flow, which is what’s driving the bid in oil prices. Still, with only 10 days left in April, WTI would need an extraordinary spike to reach $160 from current levels. The 1% pricing reflects that: this is a speculative bet on a rapid escalation or complete breakdown in talks.

What to watch

The next round of US-Iran negotiations is scheduled for April 20-21. Specific triggers that could move this contract include a shift in diplomatic tone from either side, any military activity near the Strait, or statements from President Trump or the Iranian government. Updates from energy analysts on supply flow estimates through the Strait would also matter.

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