Iran blames aggressors for Strait of Hormuz instability amid diplomatic tensions

2 hours ago 1



Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi blamed “aggressors targeting Iran” for instability in the Strait of Hormuz. The odds of a diplomatic meeting with Iran by April 30 dropped to 3.5% YES, down from 8% yesterday.

Market reaction

The statement hit several related markets. The Iran coup attempt by June 30 market sits at 12.5% YES, barely changed from 12% over the last 24 hours. Traders aren’t reading Araghchi’s rhetoric as a sign of internal instability.

The Trump agreement to Iranian demands in April market is at 20% YES, down from 26% in the last 24 hours. Traders appear to read Araghchi’s comments as reducing the chance Trump will concede on oil sanction relief by month’s end.

Why it matters

At 3.5% YES with 7 days until resolution, the diplomatic meeting market prices in near-zero probability of a last-minute breakthrough. Araghchi’s statement reinforces Iran’s hardline posture and makes any diplomatic concession from either side less plausible before the deadline.

Traders spent $1,465 in USDC to push the diplomatic meeting market down, and only $2,542 is needed to move it another five points. The Trump agreement market, with $1,814 in USDC traded, needs just $416 to shift five points. Both markets are thin enough that a single large order could cause significant price swings.

What to watch

Any unexpected diplomatic gestures from Tehran or Washington could reprice these markets quickly. Back-channel talks or mediation involving third-party states like Oman or Qatar would be the most likely catalysts. At 3.5¢, a YES share pays 28.5x, a bet that requires believing in a dramatic reversal from both governments within a week.

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