US Navy destroyers transit Strait of Hormuz amid Iranian threats

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Two U.S. Navy destroyers transited the Strait of Hormuz on April 11 despite Iranian threats, but the Polymarket contract on U.S. Navy escorts through Hormuz by April 30 dropped to 18% YES, down from 24% the day before.

Market reaction

The 6-point drop over 24 hours suggests traders view the transit as distinct from a formal commercial escort operation. Daily volume is at $6,939 in USDC traded, with $2,110 needed to move the price 5 points, indicating moderate liquidity.

Why it matters

The transit happened over warnings from the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, which suggests U.S. willingness to challenge Iranian control of the strait. The strait carries a significant share of global oil shipments, so any shift toward active commercial escorts would have broad consequences. But no official announcement or named operation accompanied the transit, which likely explains why odds fell rather than rose.

What to watch

The contract expires April 30, leaving roughly 14 days. A formal U.S. military announcement or confirmed tanker escort operation, particularly from CENTCOM or the Pentagon, would be the clearest market-moving event. Without one, the contract will likely continue to price in the gap between military posturing and an actual escort mission.

At 18¢ per YES share, the contract pays 5.56x if escorts occur before the deadline. That return reflects how much the market doubts escalation will happen on this timeline.

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