Traders placed $430 million in bearish bets on oil prices just before President Trump extended the Iran ceasefire. WTI Crude Oil hitting $160 in April is at 1% YES.
Market reaction
The ceasefire extension reduces the likelihood of supply disruptions, cooling oil price spike fears. The market for WTI Crude Oil hitting $160 in April sits at 1% YES, unchanged from 24 hours ago. Traders are skeptical about any near-term escalation driving up prices. The $430 million in bets likely anticipated this kind of geopolitical development.
Why it matters
Trading on this market shows a face value of $49,622 daily, but the real dollars at work are just $514. It takes $1,955 to move the price 5 percentage points, which points to limited market depth. The lack of price movement despite the news confirms traders aren’t expecting oil prices anywhere near $160 in the short term.
The ceasefire extension temporarily reduces tensions but doesn’t resolve underlying issues. A YES share priced at 1¢ offers a potential 100x return if oil prices surge unexpectedly. Significant geopolitical or market shifts would be needed for this to pay off.
What to watch
Further developments in US-Iran negotiations, particularly any mediation efforts by Pakistan or changes in OPEC+ production strategies, could move future oil price expectations.
Get prediction market intelligence as a structured API feed. Early access waitlist.
Related to This Story ▼ Iran ceasefire fails to impact WTI Crude Oil market odds