Bitcoin (BTC) jumped to a 10-week high above $78,000 after Donald Trump said the Strait of Hormuz reopened and claimed Iran would indefinitely halt its nuclear program.
However, Iran’s Parliament Speaker Mohammad Ghalibaf disputed the claims, warning the strait may not stay open if the US blockade continues, and saying passage depends on a designated route and Iranian authorization. This denial can rapidly change market expectations for Middle East de-escalation, raising the risk of a fast repricing.
BTC briefly tested around $78,400 before retracing to just above $77,000. Traders may see a weekend pattern of lower volatility, but with traditional futures reopening Sunday evening, the next 48 hours could bring sharper swings—turning the $78K push into a potential bull trap if headlines worsen.
Broader macro: rising expectations for a Federal Reserve pivot toward cuts as early as 2026 could support risk assets if geopolitical risk eases, but ongoing uncertainty keeps volatility elevated. Watch US-Iran diplomatic signals and any uranium/sanctions breakthrough for confirmation.
Neutral
BTC PriceMiddle East RiskStrait of HormuzIran-US TalksDe-escalation Headline Risk
The Strait of Hormuz has reopened, easing fears of a prolonged crude oil supply disruption tied to US-Iran tensions. The change has pressured the Polymarket crude oil prediction contract that targets $90 per barrel by June 30.
Market reaction: The strait’s reopening is seen as a sign of de-escalation in the US-Iran-Israel conflict. As a result, the market forecasting crude oil at $90 by June 30 faces downward pressure, with earlier spikes in activity cooling as the supply threat recedes.
Why it matters: The situation remains fragile. President Trump’s claims about a broader peace deal could keep traders reassessing upside oil risks. If the Israel–Lebanon ceasefire holds, odds of a sharp oil spike would likely fall. But any breakdown in negotiations or renewed hostilities could quickly raise those odds again.
What to watch for traders: Actual USDC volume on the Polymarket market is reported at $0, suggesting traders are monitoring without committing capital. With a thin order book, even smaller trades could move the contract sharply. Near-term catalysts include updates from the EIA and Saudi Arabia’s energy minister on production/inventories, plus OPEC+ meeting outcomes and US government statements related to the conflict.
Overall, the Strait of Hormuz reopening is a near-term risk-off to oil-supply disruption pricing, but the underlying geopolitical volatility is likely to keep headline-driven swings alive for the rest of the quarter.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzCrude OilPrediction MarketsUS-Iran TensionsOPEC+
A Brazil-based cybersecurity researcher says a fake Ledger wallet scam is being sold on a Chinese marketplace. The package looks authentic, but when the device is connected and checked via Ledger Live, it fails the “Genuine Check,” confirming it is not a real Ledger unit.
Inside the counterfeit hardware, the researcher found major red flags. It uses an ESP32-S3 chip with internal flash instead of Ledger’s Secure Element. Firmware analysis also showed the user PIN and the seed phrase are stored in plaintext, plus hardcoded links to attacker-controlled command-and-control (C2) servers.
The attack chain focuses on phishing outside the device. Victims are prompted by a QR code on the packaging to install a counterfeit “Ledger Live” app across Android/iOS/Windows/macOS. The fake app shows a Genuine Check screen that always “passes,” then collects wallet setup data while exfiltrating seed phrases to external servers. For Android, the decompiled APK indicates stealth behavior, including covert network requests and continued background activity after the app is closed.
The researcher stressed this is not a flaw in Ledger’s Secure Element or Genuine Check. For traders, this is mainly a self-custody security risk: account takeovers can rise when users install a fake Ledger wallet. Traders should treat QR links from untrusted sources as hostile and verify hardware and firmware authenticity before use. The report has been submitted to Ledger, with further analysis planned for Windows, macOS, and iOS.
Iranian officials said they are hopeful about a preliminary agreement with the US to extend the US-Iran ceasefire. In the prediction market for “US-Iran ceasefire by April 21,” odds are at 8.0% YES.
Market reactions also moved related contracts. The “no US-Iran diplomatic meeting by June 30” contract is only 2.1% YES. Separately, the Iran uranium enrichment agreement by April 30 rose to 44.4% YES from 35% the prior day, highlighting how traders are still tying de-escalation expectations to enrichment terms.
Trading activity shows real interest: the US-Iran ceasefire market has $699,190 in USDC volume over 24 hours. The order book suggests $4,528 is needed to shift odds by 5 percentage points, implying meaningful liquidity.
Key point for traders: the US-Iran ceasefire extension outlook looks fragile because no specific uranium enrichment deal is confirmed yet. Watch for announcements from Pakistan, the US, or Iran. Any confirmed resumption of talks could quickly reprice these probabilities.
Zcash has released urgent security updates—zcashd v6.12.1 and Zebra v4.3.1—to patch vulnerabilities that could cause node crashes and potential network splits. The fixes address four major issues across both clients, including an Orchard action-encoding bug that may crash nodes processing certain Orchard transactions. A related consensus-split risk was also identified between zcashd and Zebra if they became incompatible. Developers also corrected a problem that could shut down the turnstile accounting system; they said it was not sufficient to steal funds or mint counterfeit coins. Additional safety checks were added to reduce risks from uncontrolled integer operations that could lead to calculation errors in rare edge cases.
Security disclosure came from researcher Alex “Scalar” Sol on April 4, 2026, and a prior related report was made in March, showing ongoing ecosystem testing. Zcash teams (zcashd by the Zcash Open Development Lab and Zebra by the Zcash Foundation) coordinated quickly, and mining pools reportedly implemented the updates early. Importantly, developers stated none of the vulnerabilities were used in the wild, no bad transactions were found on mainnet, and there is no supply inflation risk for ZEC. Users are advised to upgrade to stay fully protected against future attempts.
Keywords for traders: Zcash, zcashd, Zebra, node crash, network split, mainnet stability, upgrade risk.
A domestic political backlash after an inconclusive Iran engagement has increased pressure on Donald Trump’s presidency. In a Trump presidency prediction market, the YES probability for Trump leaving office by April 30 is 0.8%, down from 1% a week ago, while traders watch for higher activity in broader scenarios (e.g., removal or resignation before 2027).
Market reaction focuses on whether erosion of Trump’s support among his base could accelerate impeachment or GOP defections. The next catalysts would be formal impeachment steps or visible cracks among senior Republican figures—especially if Senate Majority Leader John Thune starts questioning Trump’s leadership.
Timing and liquidity matter. The article notes thin trading volume (about $1,791 in actual USDC) and an order book depth of $13,321 required to move prices by 5 percentage points. That makes the Trump presidency prediction market sensitive to even minor political updates. The latest move shows fragile sentiment: the YES price fell from 1% to 0.8%.
Broader implications for traders: if the political climate worsens, markets may increasingly price for impeachment/resignation and could tilt toward a higher likelihood of Democratic control in the 2026 midterms. Conversely, absent decisive actions, the odds for an immediate exit by April 30 remain low.
A River report says about 50M Americans now own Bitcoin, overtaking the roughly 37M Americans who own gold. Despite this, traders are not pricing in an immediate return to prior highs.
On Polymarket, the contract “Bitcoin above $60,000 by April 19” sits at about 100% YES, implying little perceived risk of BTC falling below that level near term. However, longer-dated targets look weaker: “Bitcoin reaching $100,000 by Dec 31, 2026” is around 38% YES, while “$150,000 by Dec 31, 2026” is near 11% YES.
The gap is notable. Americans hold roughly 40% of global Bitcoin supply, yet Bitcoin is down about 20% year-to-date. This suggests real spot demand is not translating into strong price expectations.
Trading conditions also matter. The Bitcoin price-targets market shows about $2,274 in USDC volume over the past 24 hours, with order-book depth around $8,640 to move the price by 5 points—meaning large trades can still shift prices quickly.
What to watch next: Federal Reserve signals and major institutional flows tied to BlackRock’s Bitcoin exposure (ETF flows and related product activity) are flagged as likely catalysts. If Bitcoin can find a clear macro and institutional trigger, the market’s odds for $100,000 could improve; otherwise, the current pricing implies a choppy, range-bound path.
Russia has introduced a bill to criminalize unlicensed crypto services. Submitted to the State Duma, the proposal would require individuals and companies providing crypto services without authorization to face criminal penalties, including jail and fines.
Key points include: fines of 100,000–300,000 rubles, forced labor or imprisonment up to 4 years, and much harsher treatment where losses exceed 3.5M rubles (“major damage”) and 13.5M rubles (“particularly serious”). For organized groups, penalties could reach compulsory servitude up to 5 years or prison up to 7 years, plus fines up to 1M rubles.
Officials frame the move as part of a broader plan to improve transparency and curb financial crime tied to crypto. For traders, tighter enforcement against unlicensed crypto services could increase compliance costs and regulatory uncertainty, especially for Russia-exposed platforms. Near term, this is typically bearish for risk appetite as liquidity and business models may tighten around licensed providers only.
Bearish
Russia regulationCrypto complianceCriminal penaltiesCrypto licensingMarket transparency
US-Iran conflict resolution is increasingly being priced by traders. The probability of a permanent peace deal by April 30 has doubled to 46.5% (up from 17% last week), while the US-Iran ceasefire by April 21 is at 8%. Markets also price high odds for a permanent peace deal later in the timeline: May 31 at 65.5% and June 30 at 66%.
Despite improving diplomatic odds, oil risks remain elevated. Traders are pricing crude oil to reach $90 by June, citing disruptions such as continued Strait of Hormuz closure risk. The market for Trump’s agreement to Iranian oil sanction relief is less impacted, with odds steady at 36%, suggesting traders see near-term sanctions changes as unlikely compared with the broader conflict resolution path.
On-chain-style participation indicators (within prediction markets) show actual trading volume of $699,190 in USDC across US-Iran ceasefire contracts over the past 24 hours. Liquidity depth is also notable: moving the April 30 contract price by 5 percentage points would require $18,640, implying institutional-level involvement.
Key watch items are upcoming negotiations and any statements/actions from CENTCOM, plus intermediaries such as Oman and Qatar. A potential deal by June 30 is offering a payout profile: buying YES at 72.5¢ implies a 1.52x return if the deal materializes.
Keywords: US-Iran conflict resolution, oil prices, prediction markets, USDC volume, Strait of Hormuz.
Neutral
US-Iran conflict resolutionOil price riskPrediction marketsStrait of HormuzUSDC volume
Circle has launched the USDC Bridge, a new interface on top of its Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP) to make native USDC cross-chain transfers simpler. Circle says USDC Bridge enables users to move USDC in a “predictable, transparent way” using a native burn-and-mint mechanism, with no typical bridge “complexities.” The service will automatically handle gas fees, show fees upfront, and provide live transfer status.
USDC Bridge builds on CCTP (introduced April 2023), which removes the need for wrapped or synthetic versions of USDC and supports hundreds of millions of USDC transfers daily. Circle says USDC Bridge supports transfers between at least 17 EVM-compatible chains, including Ethereum, Avalanche, Arbitrum, Base, Monad, Optimism, Polygon, Sonic, and World Network. It also notes CCTP supports non-EVM chains such as Solana, Sui, and Aptos.
Separately, Circle is facing a class action alleging it failed to freeze about $230M worth of USDC linked to a Drift Protocol exploit (April 1). The complaint seeks damages, with the final amount to be determined at trial.
For traders, USDC Bridge may increase cross-chain throughput and reduce friction around stablecoin routing, potentially supporting stablecoin liquidity and adoption—though ongoing legal risk remains a sentiment overhang.
Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf dismissed President Trump’s claims, saying they are false and that friction around the Strait of Hormuz will likely persist. That messaging is pushing traders to discount near-term resolution.
In the Hormuz blockade prediction market, the “Yes” probability for Trump lifting the blockade by May 31 remains at 86%. Earlier expiries show lower confidence: April 17 is effectively dead at ~0.1% and April 19 is 13.5% “Yes,” implying skepticism about a resolution before May.
The largest move is between April 19 and May 31, suggesting any change is expected after April. A separate market for a US–Iran permanent peace deal by April 22 sits at 30.5% “Yes.” Trading volumes and order-book depth also highlight caution: about $33,928 traded across Hormuz markets in 24 hours, while roughly $3,730 in additional order-book liquidity is needed to move the May 31 contract by 5 points.
Analysts for traders: the key catalysts are expected to be Trump’s public updates and any US Navy operational announcements that confirm whether blockade conditions actually change. If the blockade outlook worsens, contracts tied to peace prospects are likely to face continued selling pressure; if new operational signals appear, the May 31 probabilities could reprice quickly.
For crypto traders, the immediate link is indirect: the markets reflect rising geopolitical risk and trader positioning, which can spill into broader risk sentiment.
Trump warned he will resume US airstrikes if a US-Iran ceasefire deal is not reached by April 21. With five days left, the prediction market for a US-Iran ceasefire extension is at 75% YES (up from 70% a week ago), while a full “permanent peace deal” sits much lower at 30.5% YES.
Traders remain skeptical. The contract for “ceasefire end” is only 6.5% YES and is falling versus a week ago, implying markets expect diplomacy, delay, or interim arrangements rather than immediate escalation. The article frames Trump’s comments as likely pressure rather than a policy shift; the real trigger would be verifiable action such as renewed strikes or formal diplomatic announcements.
USDC derivatives activity highlights shifting expectations. Ceasefire extension volume is about $89,960/day in USDC, with an 8-point move recorded at 6:06 PM. The “permanent peace deal” contract trades about $267,520/day and saw a 4-point spike. The “ceasefire end” contract is thin (~$5,810/day), so small flows can move prices sharply.
For crypto traders, the key catalysts are CENTCOM briefings and statements from Iran’s Foreign Ministry. Any confirmation of renewed strikes tied to the US-Iran ceasefire deadline could quickly reprice related prediction markets, with the thin “ceasefire end” contract most prone to fast settlement-risk repricing.
US destroyers, per the Washington Post, forced 3 Iranian tankers to turn back and are pursuing 2 more in the Strait of Hormuz. Traffic is expected to normalize by April 30, but prediction markets show traders still pricing elevated risk.
The USDC prediction market contract for April 30 fell 9.5 points in 24 hours to 62.5% (down from 60%). The May 31 contract stayed near 86%, implying any resolution is more likely between early and late May rather than within the next two weeks—more tied to diplomacy or military developments than a quick fix.
Market reaction remains cautious because Strait of Hormuz odds are thin and sensitive: about $32.2k USDC volume over 24 hours, and roughly $354 of order cost can move prices by 5 points. Traders are watching CENTCOM updates and Iranian government statements; fresh ceasefire or status-change signals could re-rate odds quickly, while continued pressure keeps short-term volatility risk elevated.
Overall, this Strait of Hormuz operation is framed as naval pressure without direct combat, suggesting risk is “high but contained,” but not resolved.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzUS-Iran tensionsMaritime disruptionPrediction marketsUSDC
Mastercard is evaluating RLUSD (Ripple USD) settlement for card payments on the XRP Ledger. In an April 16 interview at an XRPL Commons and Global Digital Finance stablecoin roundtable, Christian Rau (Mastercard SVP for digital assets and blockchain) said Mastercard is working with crypto exchange Gemini to build an RLUSD settlement use case.
Rau described this as “payments first,” meaning Mastercard would use RLUSD as an additional settlement currency inside its network rather than replacing card rails with wallet-to-wallet crypto. The company highlighted its scale—about 150 million acceptance locations and 3.8 billion cards—to support faster real-world rollout.
The most concrete example: Gemini card flows could be settled in RLUSD. Mastercard expects to bring RLUSD-based settlement live in the first half of this year.
Trading angle for XRP: any progress toward RLUSD settlement via the XRP Ledger strengthens the “real-world payments utility” narrative. That could support XRP sentiment as markets price in potential adoption tied to stablecoin settlement rails.
XRP is outperforming major coins, up about 8% over the past week and around 3% on the day. The move is steady rather than explosive, suggesting early accumulation but still keeping price action in a broader consolidation range.
Traders are focused on a key technical zone. XRP is testing resistance near $1.44 and holding support around $1.40. The token is trading above its 200-day EMA, which is constructive, but follow-through looks limited.
Volume is the main uncertainty. Analysts note that inconsistent participation could mean XRP fails to sustain gains, risking another rejection back into the range. Still, XRP’s relative strength versus BTC and ETH—often seen at the start of rotation phases—supports the idea of a potential XRP breakout, if volume expands.
What to watch next:
- A clean move above $1.44 would strengthen the bullish XRP breakout thesis.
- Losing $1.40 would weaken the near-term setup and increase range-reversion risk.
- Monitor whether price can build volume on higher levels; without it, rallies may remain contained.
Overall, this is a “watch the confirmation” setup: constructive structure and relative strength, but no decisive breakout confirmation yet.
Neutral
XRPcrypto technical analysisbreakout watchmarket rotation200-day EMA
President Trump announced a Strait of Hormuz blockade starting later on April 18, 2026. The Strait of Hormuz blockade is expected to disrupt global oil flows and increase prices, raising energy-driven volatility across financial markets.
The article notes that about 20% of global oil transit passes through the Strait of Hormuz, so even partial disruption could quickly spill into broader energy pricing. Traders also anticipate a market reaction that could pressure equities lower, citing S&P 500 prediction markets that lean bearish.
On Polymarket, S&P 500 movement contracts for April 14 show consensus outcomes: the April 14 “opens up or down” and “opens up or down/opens” style contracts sit at 100% “YES” with no visible trading volume and odds effectively locked at 100% “YES”. Thin liquidity could amplify swings when trading resumes.
Brent crude is the key watch level. Traders betting on a downturn are looking for Brent to break above $110, which would add further pressure on the S&P 500.
Finally, the article points to upcoming Federal Reserve commentary—especially Powell’s next speech—as a possible catalyst if monetary policy expectations shift in response to the oil shock from the Strait of Hormuz blockade.
Bearish
Strait of Hormuz blockadeoil pricesenergy shockS&P 500 volatilityFederal Reserve
A civilian cruise ship transited the Strait of Hormuz for the first time since the Feb 2026 war began, a concrete sign of loosening conditions and improved clearance for Strait of Hormuz shipping.
The related prediction market on the UK deploying warships now sits around 7.5% YES, down from about 12% a week ago, with 14 days left to resolve.
Market reaction suggests traders read the Strait of Hormuz cruise transit as reducing (not increasing) the likelihood of a British naval deployment. Liquidity is thin: total face-value trading is about $24,906 per day, but actual USDC traded is about $2,086. The order book is so sensitive that roughly $427 in additional orders could move the price by 5 percentage points.
What to watch: any announcements from the UK Ministry of Defence or allied naval movements, plus developments from Emmanuel Macron’s diplomacy and changes in IRGC posture.
Trading angle: buying YES at ~7.5¢ offers an 18.2x return if UK warships are deployed within the next two weeks, but the bet depends on whether de-escalation continues or the UK chooses force projection while conditions are calmer.
SEO note: Strait of Hormuz prediction market volatility looks high due to low liquidity, so price swings may remain sharp.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzUK naval deploymentPrediction marketsGeopolitical riskUSDC liquidity
Strait of Hormuz shipping contracts are wobbling as traders price a growing Iran risk from the IRGC’s “mosquito fleet” (small fast-attack craft). The latest report, citing a New York Times account of Iran’s Strait threat, points to pessimism for commercial traffic—fears include harassment and partial transit restrictions.
On prediction markets, the probability of limited ship transits stays extremely low (e.g., fewer than 10 ships through Apr 8–12 and fewer than 20 ships through Apr 12), reinforcing expectations of disruption. At the same time, the Polymarket “Warships Through the Strait of Hormuz” market shows UK deployment odds falling: the chance of UK warships by Apr 30 slips to around 6% from 12% a week earlier.
For crypto traders, this matters mainly through risk sentiment. The warship market is thin and price-sensitive (about $427 order-book depth, ~$2,086 daily USDC volume), so small positioning shifts can quickly move contract odds. Any official UK MoD confirmation of frigate movements through the Strait of Hormuz would be a near-term catalyst that could reprice probabilities fast.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzIran IRGCshipping disruptionprediction marketsUK warship odds
US officials hinted at a possible deal with Iran, but the stance remains unclear. In US-Iran ceasefire prediction markets, trader expectations are re-pricing diplomacy quickly.
Probabilities shifted sharply. The Apr 30 US-Iran ceasefire market rose to 47.5% (from 17% a week earlier). Apr 22 climbed to 31.5% (from 12%). May 31 jumped to 65.5% (from ~31%), and Jun 30 also increased to 72.5%.
Liquidity remains a key driver of how fast prices move. 24-hour USDC volume is about $699,190. The May 31 order book is deeper, with ~$14,900 needed to move price by 5 percentage points; the Jun 30 contract is thinner at ~$4,528, making it more swing-prone.
At 47.5¢, the May/Apr 30-style “YES” share pays $1 if a ceasefire is announced by Apr 30 (around a 2.9x return). Traders are watching for concrete announcements, possibly involving Trump, or intermediary diplomatic steps via Oman and Qatar. The article also flags that the underlying news source quality is low, so the move may reflect speculation rather than confirmed progress.
For traders, any verified de-escalation could reduce geopolitical risk premia, but a reversal could unwind the expectations just as fast—especially in thinner contracts.
XRP has gone live on Solana via wrapped XRP (wXRP), with Hex Trust issuing a 1:1 token that is redeemable for native XRP. The integration uses LayerZero to support cross-chain transfers without major “value loss” or delays.
The immediate trader takeaway is broader Solana DeFi access for XRP. Holders can deploy wXRP in Solana-based trading, lending, liquidity pools, and other DeFi services. Named venues include Jupiter, Meteora, Titan Exchange (and earlier reports also cited Phantom, Jupiter, Meteora, Titan, Byreal). Initial liquidity support is reported at over $100M, which may help reduce early volatility.
Market reaction followed the launch: XRP reportedly rose about 5.15% in 24 hours to around $1.50, and daily exchange volumes were cited near $2.8B. The articles also note continued U.S. XRP spot ETF inflows (more than $38M over the week), reinforcing the “cross-chain DeFi expansion → liquidity and demand → price support” narrative.
Bottom line for traders: wXRP increases XRP’s on-chain utility on Solana and could support near-term sentiment through liquidity/volume, while strengthening longer-term cross-chain positioning.
According to SoSoValue, Ethereum spot ETFs recorded $127M total net inflows on Apr 17 (ET), marking the 7th consecutive day of inflows. The largest single-day flow came from Fidelity’s FETH, with $84.13M net inflow. BlackRock’s ETHA followed with $30.80M net inflow. As of the report time, total spot ETF net assets were $14.26B, with the net asset ratio at 4.87% versus Ethereum’s total market cap. Historical cumulative net inflows reached $11.94B.
For traders, sustained Ethereum spot ETF demand can be read as continued institutional buying pressure. Monitor whether inflows persist day-to-day and whether premium/spot pricing tightens across major Ethereum venues, as ETF flow momentum often influences short-term volatility and broader ETH market sentiment.
An Israeli airstrike hit Ain Saadeh, a Christian Lebanese town outside traditional Hezbollah strongholds, killing politician Pierre Mouawad, his wife, and another civilian. The incident widens the conflict’s geography and raises sectarian tensions.
In prediction markets, the Israeli-Hezbollah ceasefire-by-April-30 contract on Polymarket rose sharply from about 45% to 93.7% over the past week, indicating traders increasingly expect a ceasefire. The June 30 contract also climbed to 96.6%.
The April 30 contract shows daily volume of $1,041,878 in USDC, and a 5-point move would cost roughly $50,093, suggesting strong conviction. The largest jump—about 13 points—occurred at 1:16 PM, likely tied to fresh developments. Even so, the Israeli airstrike signals potentially more aggressive tactics that could complicate ceasefire prospects.
At the market price of around 6¢ for “NO” (no ceasefire by April 30), traders effectively face a payout of $1, implying a potential 16.67x return if escalation continues. Near-term trading focus is likely to shift to Israeli Defense Forces updates and any Hezbollah response, which could swing ceasefire odds in either direction.
U.S. Rep. Eric Swalwell resigned after sexual-assault and harassment allegations. The Polymarket contract tied to his departure by May 31 is now locked at 100% YES.
Trading read-through for Polymarket traders: the Polymarket contract has 45 days until resolution, but since the resignation there has been $0 volume and no trades in the last 24 hours. With the YES side fully settled, the Polymarket contract is effectively dead, leaving little room for meaningful price movement.
What to watch next: the market could only reopen if Swalwell reverses the resignation or if a court restores his status—both viewed as extremely unlikely. The House Ethics Committee and California Gov. Gavin Newsom may proceed with procedural steps, but they are not expected to change the binary outcome.
Bottom line: this is a resolved political prediction market event, not a direct crypto catalyst. Any actionable flows are more likely to rotate into related political prediction markets rather than this specific Polymarket contract.
US President Donald Trump suggested there is progress in US-Iran nuclear talks and said Washington is aiming to obtain “nuclear dust” after any deal.
In the prediction markets tied to Iran’s uranium enrichment timetable, the “Iran agrees to end enrichment by April 30” contract jumped to 44.5% YES (from 35% the prior day). After Trump’s comments, the April 30 market also rose, and the largest intraday move was a sharp evening spike consistent with a sizable buy order.
Traders still expect continued dialogue: the “June 30 market with no diplomatic meeting” remained stable at 2.1%. Reported trading volume on the April enrichment contract was about $23,824 (in actual USDC), indicating interest that is meaningful but not overwhelmingly conviction-driven. Liquidity appears moderate, with price sensitivity to larger trades (order book depth: $599 to move price by 5 points).
Key deal details remain unresolved, especially uranium enrichment limits and the terms for IAEA inspections. For traders, the current payoff profile implies that buying YES at 44.5 cents could reach roughly 2.56x if Iran confirms by the April 30 deadline.
Next catalysts for US-Iran nuclear talks price action include official confirmation of meeting location or any breakthrough announcement from Islamabad, plus updated IAEA reports and changes in Iranian official rhetoric. A meeting-location confirmation would likely be the short-term volatility driver.
Bitcoin (BTC) is rising after consolidation, but it is still lagging behind broader risk assets. The article cites XWIN Research Japan, arguing the equity rally to fresh all-time highs is not a broad “risk-on” return—rather, it is a selective repricing of tail risks as geopolitical and energy-shock fears ease.
Relative performance matters: BTC is roughly 40% below its own all-time high, while Ethereum (ETH) is about 52% off its peak. In that framework, crypto is still “waiting its turn” in the downstream liquidity sequence (oil/commodities → dollar/rates → equities → later-cycle assets like BTC). For traders, the key takeaway is timing: BTC’s strength may be real, but the macro catalyst for sustained crypto participation may not be fully in place.
On the technical and market-structure side, the article highlights BTC’s range from about $72,500 to $75,000 after a high-volume selloff in early February that drove BTC into the low $60,000s. It says BTC has broken above the upper boundary of that range, pressing toward the descending 100-day moving average. It also notes improving short-term momentum via a 50-day moving average trend, while the 200-day moving average still sits significantly above price.
The demand test is $75,000: acceptance above $75,000 would shift the structure bullish; rejection would likely push BTC back into consolidation. Volume normalization and declining exchange reserves are presented as supportive signs that accumulation is ongoing during the move.
Overall, BTC’s lag vs equities is framed as a pre-breakout setup rather than a failure—making $75,000 a key pivot for near-term direction.
Trump maintains an Iranian port blockade and hardline rhetoric, keeping traders doubtful that a short-term resolution will happen. In the prediction market tied to the “lifting” of the blockade by May 31, the YES probability is 86.5%, unchanged from the prior day. The near-dated contract for April 19 slips from 34% to 28% YES, while April 17 stays near-zero (0.4%).
The pricing pattern suggests a catalyst is expected later: a large 64-point jump between April 19 and May 31 indicates traders are positioning for developments sometime in the May 31 window, with limited confidence on anything sooner. Liquidity appears solid: total daily USDC volume across related markets is about $33,928, and it takes roughly $3,730 to move the May 31 sub-market by 5 points.
What traders will watch includes any new Trump statements shifting blockade policy, updates from ongoing talks, CENTCOM-related dispatches, or White House releases. While a YES outcome would pay out 1x (a 1.22x return for the May 31 contract as priced), the market is effectively signaling that diplomatic breakthroughs may be required amid mounting military and economic pressure.
Keywords in focus: Iranian port blockade, prediction market probabilities, May 31 resolution window, USDC liquidity.
Bearish
Iran blockadeprediction marketsTrump policyUSDC liquidityMiddle East geopolitics
A new Google-led research paper says a sufficiently powerful quantum computer could use Shor’s algorithm to reverse Bitcoin’s elliptic-curve cryptography. That would let an attacker derive a Bitcoin private key from a known public key—making theft possible.
Bitcoin ownership security relies on elliptic curve discrete logarithms. For traditional computers, reversing the public-to-private key mapping is effectively infeasible. Shor’s algorithm, however, solves the discrete log problem efficiently if the quantum machine has enough logical qubits and fault-tolerant capacity.
The paper estimates the practical threat window: about nine minutes to complete the “second half” of the attack once the system is precomputed and prepared. Since Bitcoin’s average block confirmation time is ~10 minutes, this enables a potential mempool race. If a victim broadcasts a transaction and their public key is visible in the mempool, a quantum attacker might have roughly a 41% chance of finishing before the transaction confirms—allowing front-running or fund diversion.
A larger concern is coins whose public keys are already exposed on-chain (“at rest” attacks). The article notes 6.9 million BTC (about one-third of supply) may be vulnerable without a race against the clock. It also highlights how Taproot (active since Nov 2021) affects key exposure for spent vs unspent outputs.
Overall, the findings do not claim quantum theft is imminent, because the required quantum hardware does not yet exist—but they tighten estimates of when the risk becomes operational and could influence trader sentiment around BTC security and long-dated tail risk.
South Korea’s newly elected President Lee Jae-myung says Bitcoin and crypto are a national priority. Markets reacted immediately: Polymarket shows a “Bitcoin above $62,000” contract for April 20 at ~99.6% YES, while the April 19 “above $60,000” contract is ~99.8% YES. Reported 24h volumes are about $4,447 (Apr 19) and $1,686 (Apr 20). Lee’s economic strategy includes developing Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs and integrating blockchain into government policy. The April 19 market also cites solid order-book depth (support near current levels), with minimal price movement over 24 hours suggesting steady conviction rather than a speculative spike. Traders will watch South Korea’s Digital Asset Basic Act details and any specifics on the proposed ETFs, as implementation could materially shift institutional demand for Bitcoin. Crypto market context: the article frames this as another pro-crypto government signal that may reinforce existing support from whale accumulation and miner holding behavior.
Bullish
BitcoinSouth Korea regulationETF expectationsPrediction marketsMarket structure
Crypto traders tracking geopolitical risk are watching the Strait of Hormuz closely. Trump said the US will not impose ship transit fees while Iran negotiations continue, shifting sentiment in prediction markets. By May 31, odds for lifting the US blockade rose to 86.5% (YES). For the earlier window, April contracts saw smaller moves.
On the sanctions side, odds for Iranian oil sanction relief improved to 54.5% (YES) by April, but traders remain cautious. The hardline posture on Iranian uranium transfers is a key headwind, leaving details unresolved and keeping the outlook two-sided.
Liquidity is modest but active: the Strait of Hormuz blockade market trades about $5,868/day in USDC, while the sanctions relief market trades around $1,975/day. With thin depth, small order flow can reprice contracts quickly.
Key watch items for Strait of Hormuz catalysts: any change in Trump or Iranian messaging, plus possible mediation involving Pakistan and Egypt. A clearer negotiation milestone after the April 19 window could drive faster repricing.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzUS-Iran NegotiationsSanctions ReliefPrediction MarketsGeopolitical Risk