The U.S. Navy has directed 31 vessels to turn around or return to port as part of its blockade against Iran. With 68 days until resolution, the Polymarket contract on Strait of Hormuz traffic returning to normal by June 30 sits at
Market reaction
The Strait of Hormuz Traffic Returns to Normal contract has dropped 25% in implied probability of normalization by the deadline. Trading volume over the past 24 hours is zero, and the order book is thin enough that a small amount of capital could move the odds significantly. Traders appear to be pricing in continued disruptions and increased naval activity, given that the blockade is part of a broader pressure campaign on Iran while ceasefire talks remain stalled.
Why it matters
The blockade’s intensification signals that the U.S. intends to maintain economic pressure on Iran even with the ceasefire extension in place. The seizure of Iranian vessels and the deployment of major U.S. naval assets point to sustained enforcement. For traders, this means that without a diplomatic breakthrough or significant de-escalation, the probability of Strait of Hormuz traffic returning to normal levels stays near zero.
What to watch
– Announcements from U.S. or Iranian officials on blockade policy or potential negotiations – Changes in naval deployments or military actions in the region – Any movement in the contract’s order book, given how little capital is needed to shift odds at current depth
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