An Iranian arms broker was running a global weapons pipeline for the regime from a townhouse in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles. The arrest has pushed down odds of Trump agreeing to Iranian demands, with the probability of oil sanctions relief by April 30 now at 31% YES.
## Market reaction
The sting operation targeting Shamim Mafi, a U.S. resident linked to $70 million in arms deals with Sudan, is part of a broader U.S. clampdown on Iran’s sanctions evasion. The Trump Iran Demands market has dropped to 31% YES, down from 65% just 24 hours ago. Daily face value is at $291,946, with real USDC traded at $138,687 over the same period. It takes $1,719 to shift the odds by five points, indicating moderate sensitivity to large trades.
The Iran Nuclear Agreement market also sits at 31% YES. The largest move in the last 24 hours was a sharp 12-point drop, showing traders reacting to news of heightened U.S. enforcement.
## Why it matters
Mafi’s arrest signals that the U.S. is unlikely to ease sanctions soon, as it reinforces evidence of Iran’s continued involvement in prohibited arms trading. At 31¢, a YES share in the Trump Iran Demands market pays $1 if resolved, a 3.22x return if Trump’s administration unexpectedly reverses its stance. Given current enforcement trends, that looks like a long shot.
## What to watch
Watch for statements from the White House and the Treasury Department. Any indication of a shift in U.S. policy toward Iran could move these markets sharply. Karoline Leavitt’s next press briefing may offer specific signals on the administration’s direction.
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2 hours ago
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