Iran is leveraging legal arguments to control the Strait of Hormuz indefinitely, citing U.S. military presence as justification. The market on UK warship deployment through the Strait by April 30 sits at 8.5% YES, down from 12% yesterday.
Market reaction
The UK warship deployment market dropped from 12% to 8.5% in 24 hours as traders priced in Iran’s legal claims against the likelihood of UK military passage. Trading volume is at $1,412 in daily USDC traded, and it takes just $304 to move the market 5 points. That thin liquidity makes the contract vulnerable to large single trades, though the biggest recent move was a 2-point spike yesterday.
Why it matters
Iran’s legal argument is more saber-rattling than settled law, but it complicates the decision for countries weighing military passage through the Strait. The claim that U.S. presence justifies Iranian control gives Tehran a rhetorical framework for escalation, even if it has no standing under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
What to watch
Statements from the UK Ministry of Defence or any IRGC enforcement actions could sharply move these odds. A shift in either Iran’s posture or UK policy would reprice this contract quickly. A YES share at 8.5¢ pays $1 if resolved, a 11.8x return. That payout requires believing the UK will send warships through the Strait before April 30 despite Iran’s escalating posture.
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