Spain is advising immediate airline ticket purchases amid rising oil prices from the Iran conflict. The Polymarket contract for crude oil hitting an all-time high by April 30 sits at 1.1% YES, down from 2% last week.
Market reaction
The market shows almost no belief that crude will cross $120/barrel within six days. Trading volume is $100,828 in face value but only $2,513 in actual USDC, a gap that points to thin liquidity rather than conviction. It takes just $695 to move the price by five points, making the contract vulnerable to single large trades.
The market for crude oil hitting $90 by the end of June is more active. Ongoing supply disruptions and high shipping costs continue to pressure prices even after the ceasefire. With 67 days until resolution, traders see room for price increases, though current odds on that contract aren’t specified.
Why it matters
The ceasefire has reduced immediate panic but hasn’t resolved supply constraints. At 1.1¢, a YES share pays $1 if oil hits an all-time high by April 30, a 90x return. For that bet to make sense, you’d need to believe in something like a permanent Strait of Hormuz closure within the next six days.
What to watch
OPEC+ announcements or unexpected geopolitical shifts. Changes in production policy or renewed hostilities could move these contracts fast.
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