The US has sent emergency fuel shipments to Australia as the Strait of Hormuz blockade continues disrupting global oil supply. Odds for US escorts through Hormuz by April 30 sit at
Market reaction
Traders are watching the US escorts commercial ship through Hormuz by April 30 market, but the drop from 6% to 5.5% signals skepticism about naval escorts starting soon, even with the US actively supporting Australia’s fuel supply. Seven days remain before resolution, leaving little time for a policy shift or military action to change the picture.
Why it matters
Liquidity is modest: $1,978 in USDC traded over the last 24 hours. It takes just $1,491 to move odds by 5 percentage points, meaning a single larger trade could swing the market significantly. The biggest recent price move was a 2-point spike, consistent with low conviction about imminent US escort operations.
The Hormuz closure and US emergency measures to supply Australia point to a serious and worsening situation. That raises the probability of direct US involvement in securing shipping lanes, but without official confirmation of escort operations, the market is unlikely to move much. At the current
What to watch
CENTCOM statements or direct announcements from President Trump about naval operations in the region. Concrete troop movements or official declarations could drive sharp price changes in this market.
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