Iran may skip US talks in Islamabad amid naval blockade tensions

1 hour ago 1



The second round of US-Iran talks in Islamabad is in doubt after Iran signaled it may not attend due to the ongoing US naval blockade. The ceasefire-by-April-30 market sits at 37.5% YES, down from 36% a week ago.

Market reaction

The April 30 ceasefire market is priced at 37.5% YES with only 10 days left, and traders are pricing in the risk of talks stalling entirely. The diplomatic meeting location market ticked up slightly to 3.4% YES as Iran’s hesitation about attending raises questions about alternative venues.

Why it matters

The Israel-Iran permanent peace deal by April 30 market is at 4.8% YES. Iran’s potential absence makes any diplomatic breakthrough by month’s end unlikely. The contract bounced from 4% to 4.8% recently, but odds are still very low.

What to watch

Trading volume in the ceasefire market was $54,670 in actual USDC over the past day, moderate liquidity. But only $841 is needed to move the price by 5 points, meaning a single large order could shift the market significantly. The largest recent move was a 4-point drop.

This news comes from a Tier 3 source, so treat it cautiously. The naval blockade and Iran’s resistance to joining talks are real setbacks that reduce the likelihood of a deal. A YES share in the ceasefire market at 37.5¢ pays $1 if it resolves, a 3.28x return. For that bet to make sense, traders would need to expect resumed talks or an unexpected diplomatic opening.

Watch for statements from CENTCOM or the Iranian Foreign Ministry. Any language suggesting resumed negotiations or an easing of the blockade would move these odds.

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