Shipping disruptions in the Persian Gulf persist with no US-Iran diplomatic meeting scheduled. The market for a qualifying diplomatic meeting by June 30, 2026, is at
The disruption comes from the ongoing Iran War and Iran’s effective blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. The diplomatic meeting market reflects deep skepticism about near-term talks. The marginal rise in odds actually suggests mounting pessimism (this is a “no meeting” contract). The order book is thin: $455 would move the price 5 points, leaving it vulnerable to single large trades.
Continued shipping disruptions are pushing oil prices upward. The market for crude oil hitting $90 by June is likely to see more activity as supply constraints persist. Zero 24-hour volume on that contract indicates traders are waiting for stronger signals before committing.
The odds for diplomatic talks reflect a broad belief that resolution is nowhere close. YES shares on the diplomatic meeting contract are priced at just under 4¢, which would pay out roughly 25x if talks materialize. But with no visible diplomatic channels open, the market prices that outcome as extremely unlikely.
Watch for announcements from Oman or the IAEA that could signal movement toward talks. Statements from Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman on oil supply or any EIA updates could shift the crude oil contract.
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