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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

US-Iran Ceasefire: Iran to Reopen Airspace in Phases, Nuclear Talks Weigh

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Iran’s Civil Aviation Organization says it will reopen airspace in four phases after a 49-day closure, following US-Israeli military de-escalation. The move offers a modest lift for the US-Iran ceasefire outlook before April 30, but escalation risk remains priced high in prediction markets. The US-Iran ceasefire market is around 37.5% “YES” for outcomes ending by April 30. Meanwhile, nuclear-related sub-markets are deteriorating: the enriched-uranium surrender market falls sharply to 31.2% from 65%, and the broader uranium enrichment agreement market drops to 27.8% from 50%. Traders interpret this as an “offsetting” signal—airspace normalization is underway, yet Iran is still refusing to send enriched materials to the U.S. while keeping uranium on its territory, making a full surrender agreement harder. The term structure suggests attention may shift to catalysts between April and June, with odds improving by roughly 27 points from the April 30 contract to the June 30 contract. Near-term triggers include statements by key figures (e.g., Trump or Khamenei) and possible mediation via Oman or Qatar. USDC liquidity in the ceasefire market is about $80,435/day, but uranium sub-markets are thinner and can swing on large trades. For crypto traders, the US-Iran ceasefire headline may support brief risk-on sentiment, but the dominant nuclear pricing pressure points to continued geopolitical volatility risk into the April 30 window.
Neutral
US-Iran ceasefireIran airspace reopeningnuclear negotiationsprediction marketsUSDC liquidity

US-Iran peace deal odds slide as talks resume in Pakistan

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Wall Street Journal reports the White House is optimistic on US-Iran negotiations, but the US-Iran peace deal by April 22 probability has fallen to ~20% (from ~40% a day earlier). Markets reacted to claims that the next US-Iran talks may resume in Pakistan. Prediction markets also repriced by timing: the odds of no qualifying diplomatic meeting before June 30 rose to 7.1% (from 2%). Venue expectations shifted too—“US-Iran peace deal by April 22” is ~19.5% YES, “April 30” is ~37.5% (down from ~61%), while the broader “deal by June 30” remains higher at ~67.5%. Liquidity looks weaker than face-value suggests. For example, the April 22 contract has about $1.9M in nominal notional versus roughly $610K in real USDC traded, raising the risk that larger orders could move prices. Trading takeaway: US-Iran peace deal odds are being pulled lower by the near-term deadline risk, even as later timelines hold up better. Watch for official confirmation of the meeting venue and any US or Iranian official statements—delegations arriving in Islamabad this Sunday are expected to signal whether the talks are truly underway. This headline is likely to drive fast repricing in US-Iran talks prediction markets tied to USDC liquidity.
Neutral
US-Iran talkspeace-deal prediction marketsgeopolitical riskUSDC liquiditytiming risk

US-Iran peace deal market drops after Trump nuclear-material remark

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Trump’s comment about “retrieving Iranian nuclear dust” after any US-Iran deal has sharply pushed traders toward a worse short-term outlook in the US-Iran peace deal market. On the April 22 permanent peace deal contract, the YES probability fell to 19.5% from 40% in just 24 hours. The sell-off spilled across later deadlines too: the April 30 market dropped to 39.5% (from 61%); the June 30 market fell to 67.5% (from 81%), remaining the most optimistic among the three. Traders also slightly lifted odds of “no US-Iran diplomatic meeting” by June 30 to 7.4%, though liquidity is thin (about $400/day in USDC), so small orders can swing prices. Across these US-Iran peace deal markets, 24-hour volume exceeded $1.6M (USDC). The April 22 order book suggests it would take about $9,366 to shift odds by 5 points, indicating moderate resistance to manipulation from small trades. Why it matters: the new implied precondition around nuclear material gives Iran a reason to either accelerate or walk away. The market reaction suggests traders believe Iran is more likely to walk away on shorter timelines. What to watch in coming days: any official meeting dates/locations from the White House or Iran’s Foreign Ministry, signals from Pakistani mediators, and potential IAEA involvement in material supervision. At 19.5¢, the April 22 YES share offers 5.13x payout, but only if a major diplomatic breakthrough occurs within 4 days. US-Iran peace deal market expectations are clearly being repriced further out.
Bearish
US-Iran peace deal marketTrump nuclear commentprediction marketsIran nuclear negotiationscrypto trading risk

Strait of Hormuz Naval Operations: US Seizures, UK Odds Slip

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Strait of Hormuz Naval Operations are escalating. The US is increasing naval activity and plans to seize Iran-linked ships. At the same time, a prediction market on whether the UK will send warships through the Strait of Hormuz by April 30 shows odds falling to 8.5% from 12% the prior day. The broader UK “transit” market also stays at 8.5%, suggesting traders still lack confidence in a near-term allied deployment. The latest reaction looks more like headline-driven trading than a sustained repricing: traders briefly pushed the odds, then “retraced,” indicating inertia until verifiable actions occur. This matters for crypto traders because risk sentiment can shift quickly with confirmation. The report’s key takeaway is that official UK Ministry of Defence statements or visible warship movements are the clearest catalysts. If Iran signals further escalation (including IRGC responses) and intervention becomes more likely, odds could move faster than usual. Bottom line: for the Strait of Hormuz, traders are pricing outcomes based on deployable proof, not news flow alone—so expect market sensitivity to concrete signals rather than commentary.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzUS-Iran tensionsNaval operationsPrediction marketsGeopolitical risk

Senator Scott backs Hormuz blockade as Trump lift odds slip

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Senator Rick Scott said he supports a Strait of Hormuz blockade, signaling continued U.S. backing that complicates the US–China–Iran triangle. In the related prediction market, odds that Trump lifts the Hormuz blockade by May 31 fell to 78% from 90% the prior day. The near-term window weakened further: odds for an April 19 announcement dropped to 8% from 28% over the last 24 hours. Market pricing also shows a wide term structure gap: traders see about a 70-point spread between April 19 and May 31, implying any resolution is more likely after the near-term. Trading activity remains moderate, with $29,602 in USDC volume over 24 hours. Liquidity is mixed—moving the May 31 odds by 5 percentage points costs about $1,419. The largest price move was a 5-point drop around 12:19 PM, attributed to Scott’s remarks; the April 19 sub-market was thinner, requiring $3,849 for a similar move. Scott framed the Hormuz blockade as leverage against China’s oil supply chain, not only an Iran-specific tool. Traders should watch for official updates from the White House or CENTCOM, plus any new US–Iran–China diplomatic contacts, and whether other senators echo Scott’s position. Any policy or rhetoric shift could move the Hormuz blockade odds quickly. Keywords: Hormuz blockade, prediction market odds, US–China–Iran policy.
Neutral
Hormuz blockadeUS–China–Iranprediction marketsgeopolitical riskUSDC

Iran deal uncertainty: Trump warns US bombing could resume

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US-Iran tensions escalated as US President Donald Trump said the US blockade of the Strait of Hormuz remains in place and US bombing could resume if an Iran deal is not reached. In prediction markets, odds of a ceasefire breach jumped to 22% YES (from 8% a day earlier), after Trump’s remarks pushed ceasefire-break timing risk higher. At the same time, the market for lifting the blockade by May 31 fell to 78% YES (from 90%), implying traders now expect a longer timeline. Permanent peace deal odds fell to 20% YES (from 40%). For traders targeting a rapid Iran deal outcome, the April 22 “YES” contract is priced around 20¢; a YES at 20¢ would pay $1 (about a 5x return) assuming a breakthrough within four days. Trading sensitivity is high: only about $498 in USDC volume was needed to move the market 5 points, and the largest single move was a 3-point jump at 11:12 AM. Key watch items include potential CENTCOM statements, any sudden diplomatic engagement, and the timing/details of Trump’s next social media post—especially if it cites negotiation milestones tied to the Iran deal.
Bearish
US-Iran tensionsIran dealprediction marketsStrait of HormuzUSDC

US deploys 12 warships to enforce Iranian port blockade

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US deploys 12 warships, including destroyers and an aircraft carrier, to enforce a blockade of Iranian ports and pressure Iran amid US–Iran tensions. The move targets Strait of Hormuz shipping. The prediction market assessing traffic returning to normal by end-June fell to 22%, suggesting a higher chance of continued disruption after the blockade begins. The odds for fewer than 20 ships transiting Apr 6–12 stayed at 100%, since the blockade started afterward. The ceasefire is set to expire on April 22 and US–Iran talks may resume, but the military deployment implies disruption could continue. US deploys 12 warships—along with over 10,000 personnel—raises short-term uncertainty for maritime flows, with potential quick repricing if CENTCOM issues updates or Iran’s naval activity changes. For traders, the key takeaway is a risk-event setup that can shift macro and sentiment quickly; however, the article notes USDC trading volume is negligible and liquidity is thin, so market moves could be abrupt. The “traffic normalizes by June” contract pays $1 for each $0.22 YES share, implying a high potential upside if diplomacy resolves the standoff fast.
Bearish
US-Iran TensionsStrait of HormuzNaval BlockadePrediction MarketsUSDC

US-Iran ceasefire odds slide as Hormuz uncertainty persists

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US-Iran negotiations reportedly showed progress, but traders still discounted any near-term breakthrough. In the US-Iran ceasefire prediction market for an April 30 deal, “YES” odds fell to 37.5% (from 59%), continuing earlier declines as the US blockade of Iranian ports remained in place. The Strait of Hormuz backdrop stayed the key driver of hedging. Odds for a Trump Hormuz-related blockade announcement by April 19 dropped to 8%. Traders also reacted to the lack of verified concrete agreements, with the market weakening again intraday (including a notable 4-point drop at 5:27 PM mentioned in the report). A separate uranium-enrichment market for April 30 weakened too: “YES” fell to 27.8% (from 50%). Liquidity was much thinner in this market, making it more sensitive to single large bets. Traders will watch for a Trump statement on a Hormuz blockade, confirmation of any US-Iran arrangement, and IAEA updates on enrichment. Bottom line for crypto risk pricing: even with reported talks progress, US-Iran ceasefire odds and related policy-deadline bets are still being priced cautiously.
Bearish
US-Iran ceasefire oddsStrait of Hormuzuranium enrichmentgeopolitical riskprediction markets

US-Iran ceasefire odds drop as traders hedge renewed escalation

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US-Iran ceasefire is increasingly viewed as a temporary pause, not a durable peace deal. Political analyst Nima Rostami Alkhorshid says rhetoric suggests readiness to resume operations, putting the US-Iran ceasefire under pressure. In prediction markets, the probability of a ceasefire landing by April 30 fell to 37.5% from 59% within 24 hours. Related “permanent peace deal” contracts also weakened: April 22 dropped to 19.5% YES and April 30 to 37.5% YES. Traders are now focused on the ceasefire expiry window, with term-structure pricing implying a potential catalyst between April 30 and May 31. Crypto-market angle: this geopolitical uncertainty is showing up in hedging behavior and contract volatility. Liquidity is still active, but thinner later expiries can amplify price swings. Watch for shifts from CENTCOM, updated messaging by intermediaries such as Oman or Qatar, and rhetoric changes attributed to Trump or Khamenei. Any sign of renewed strikes or proxy escalation (including Houthis or Hezbollah) could reprice US-Iran ceasefire odds quickly.
Bearish
US-Iran ceasefireprediction marketsgeopolitical riskcrypto hedgingUSDC liquidity

KelpDAO exploit sparks $236M AAVE bad-debt risk, ETH -3%

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The KelpDAO exploit has been linked to roughly $294M stolen through its rsETH bridge contract. The attacker converted minted rsETH into 106,467 ETH and could leave Aave with about $236M in bad debt exposure. After the KelpDAO exploit became known, KelpDAO paused all rsETH activities and Aave froze rsETH markets, while stating its own contracts were not directly compromised. Still, the unresolved $236M bad-debt risk has driven market anxiety: Ethereum fell about 3% immediately, and AAVE dropped around 10%. On Polymarket, traders are pricing a ~15% expected move tied to the exploit, with heightened volatility because only one day remains before the April 19 deadline. A rebound in ETH may require both investigation outcomes from KelpDAO/Aave and a sentiment turn—conditions traders currently do not expect to arrive quickly. What to watch: official updates from KelpDAO and Aave, and Ethereum’s reaction around the April 19 deadline for signs the market has absorbed the shock or anticipates further fallout. (Main keywords: KelpDAO exploit; KelpDAO exploit)
Bearish
KelpDAO exploitAAVE bad debt riskrsETH bridgeEthereum volatilityDeFi protocol risk

Iran Seeks Strait of Hormuz Security Fees; Polymarket Odds Sag

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Iran says it will prioritize vessels that pay “costs of security” in the Strait of Hormuz. A Polymarket contract tracking whether fewer than 10 ships transit between April 13–19 shows only about 0.4% YES probability. Market reaction is skeptical. Analysts note enforcement is doubtful, and the contract is extremely thin: roughly $14 in real USDC trades per day. With low liquidity, a small order can move odds (a 2-point jump was seen during the past day, likely from one minor fill). Why it matters: Iran frames the fee as a defense measure, while the US and allies view it as illegal. Actual daily ship traffic has already fallen sharply, from 138 ships to roughly 5–8. The market pricing implies little chance that ship counts drop below 10 by April 19, but thin volume limits how much traders should rely on the price signal. What to watch next: Any official statement from CENTCOM or Iranian authorities, changes in military posture, or diplomatic movement could shift the odds quickly. Given current pricing, the contract offers a high payout structure (YES share pays $1 if fewer than 10 ships transit), but traders are effectively betting on strict enforcement within a very short window in the Strait of Hormuz.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzIran Shipping FeesPolymarketUSDC LiquidityMaritime Security

Iran warns it controls the Strait of Hormuz, odds of US blockade lift fall

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Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said Tehran has “exclusive control” of the Strait of Hormuz and warned that if Iran faces a US blockade, passage will be blocked. His hardline stance is unsettling traders in the Strait of Hormuz blockade prediction market linked to Donald Trump’s claim about lifting a US blockade by May 31. Market odds moved sharply lower. The probability of a May 31 resolution fell to about 78% (from ~90%). The April 19 term also dropped to ~7.5% (from ~28%), and the term structure suggests skepticism about progress between April 19 and May 31. For diplomacy, the chance of a meeting by April 30 declined to ~13.2%, pointing to lower near-term de-escalation odds. On market microstructure, liquidity looked moderate, with about $29.6k USDC traded over 24 hours and roughly $1,419 USDC needed to shift prices by 5 points. A 5-point drop occurred shortly after Ghalibaf’s comments, consistent with sell pressure. Key watch items for traders: further statements from Trump and CENTCOM, plus regional actions (e.g., Oman). In the Strait of Hormuz blockade outlook, headline risk remains high and volatility can return quickly if rhetoric or ship-transit patterns change.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzIran-US tensionsBlockade retaliationPrediction marketsUSDC

KelpDAO hack: minted 116,500 rsETH, then borrowed & sold for $250M ETH

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On-chain analyst Yu Jin reports that the KelpDAO exploit on Apr 19 led to the fake minting of 116,500 rsETH (worth about $293M). Most of the rsETH was deposited into Aave, then used as collateral to borrow ETH. A smaller portion was sold for ETH. Overall, the hacker obtained 106,466 ETH in total, valued at roughly $250M, via the combination of collateralization and selling. The activity highlights typical DeFi attack flows: exploit → token minting → use as collateral in lending (Aave) → borrow/sell the underlying asset (ETH). Key keywords for traders: KelpDAO, rsETH, Aave, ETH. Source notes that the information is for market awareness only and not investment advice.
Neutral
KelpDAO hackrsETHAaveETH exploitationDeFi lending

IRGC closes Strait of Hormuz, markets price slower US blockade reversal

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The IRGC said it has closed the Strait of Hormuz and demanded the US lift its port blockade of Iranian ports. Prediction market pricing suggests traders expect no quick de-escalation. After the Strait of Hormuz announcement, multiple risk contracts fell. The chance of a “Trump-led blockade lift by May 31” dropped to about 78% (from ~90%). The “April 19” outcome fell to roughly 8% (from ~28%). “UK warship transit by April 30” odds were also about 8.5% (down from ~12%). Traders also marked a higher risk premium for naval movement through the Strait of Hormuz, with the largest single drop around the April 19 session. Liquidity was reported as limited (low USDC volume), which can amplify short-term volatility and make contract prices move sharply on small order flow. Key watch items for Hormuz-linked trading are any changes in US Navy or UK Ministry of Defence operational language and any diplomatic or US Central Command updates. If wording shifts, Strait of Hormuz risk markets could reprice quickly, with spillover sentiment often feeding into BTC and ETH moves.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzUS-Iran tensionsshipping riskprediction marketsBTC/ETH sentiment

US to seize Iranian crude tankers and move missile systems to Jordan

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The US is preparing to seize Iranian crude tankers worldwide and to reposition missile systems to Jordan, a move described as escalatory rather than a sign of negotiation. The article frames this action alongside expectations around a possible April diplomatic shift on Iranian sanctions relief tied to Trump. In related prediction markets, the probability of Gulf states taking military action against Iran by April 30 has risen to 6% (from 4% the prior day). Liquidity is thin, with only $717 in USDC traded over the last 24 hours, and the contract depth is shallow—about $2,365 needed to move the April 30 market by 5 points—making prices vulnerable to large orders. The piece also notes that with “0% YES” priced at 0¢, any bet that Trump reverses course would require a major change in diplomatic activity. It suggests traders should watch CENTCOM briefings and Gulf state military movements. A confirmed airstrike or naval engagement by a Gulf state would likely move the April 30 market sharply. Keywords for traders: Iran crude tankers, USDC, CENTCOM, Gulf state military action probability, April 30 contract odds, sanctions relief expectations.
Bearish
Iran sanctionsMiddle East military riskCENTCOM briefingsPrediction marketUSDC liquidity

U.S. Missile Systems in Jordan as Iran-Israel Tensions Rise

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Satellite images show U.S. missile systems were relocated to Jordan as Iran-Israel tensions intensify, according to the report. The article ties the move to a likely escalation posture and notes claims by Rep. Ogles about “classified UFO evidence,” though that does not change the military facts. A related prediction-market snapshot for an Iran strike by April 30 shows contracts priced at 100% YES, suggesting traders see the outcome as effectively settled with 12 days to resolution. Similar regional risk markets are also priced at 100% YES. The coverage notes no significant new “face value” or USDC volume recently, implying limited marginal trading as participants expect little change. Key watch items include further U.S. deployments, any Iranian missile or drone launches, and diplomatic communications from regional powers. If new diplomacy or military actions shift the likelihood, the market consensus could adjust; otherwise, with U.S. missile systems in Jordan already reflected in pricing, near-term repricing pressure may remain limited. Overall, the U.S. missile systems in Jordan signal heightened readiness, but the immediate crypto-trading takeaway is that the geopolitical shock appears largely priced by prediction markets.
Neutral
GeopoliticsUS military deploymentIran-Israel tensionsPrediction marketsRisk sentiment

rsETH Bridge Hack Drains $292M, Aave Freezes Markets

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Kelp DAO suffered an rsETH bridge hack on Apr 18, draining about $292M (116,500 rsETH) via a LayerZero messaging exploit. On-chain investigators said the attacker triggered an unauthorized “lzReceive” transfer and routed funds into lending protocols. On Aave V3/V4, Compound V3, and Euler, the stolen rsETH collateral enabled borrowing of wrapped ETH, creating over $236M in debt positions and reportedly more than $280M of bad debt across protocols. In response to the rsETH bridge incident, Kelp DAO paused rsETH deposits and withdrawals using an emergency multisig. Aave said its contracts were not compromised, but froze rsETH markets on Aave V3 and Aave V4 and reviewed rsETH-backed loans opened after the exploit. Other risk controls followed: SparkLend and Fluid reportedly applied similar freezes, Lido paused further earnETH deposits due to rsETH exposure, and Ethena temporarily paused its LayerZero OFT bridge (no rsETH exposure) for about 6 hours. Aave’s token reportedly fell ~10% on the news. The event is seen as the largest DeFi exploit year-to-date, adding to ongoing cross-chain bridge security concerns after prior major breaches (e.g., Drift Protocol).
Bearish
rsETHLayerZero exploitAave freezeDeFi lending bad debtcross-chain bridge security

Israel-Hezbollah Ceasefire Faces Strain After UNIFIL Peacekeeper Killed

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UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned an attack in Lebanon that killed a French UNIFIL peacekeeper and wounded three others. The incident was attributed to Hezbollah-linked non-state actors, adding risk that the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire may not hold. For crypto traders watching the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire prediction market, both the April 30 and June 30 contracts were reported at 100% “YES,” but displayed face value and liquidity are essentially absent. That combination raises the chance of abrupt repricing if new statements or developments emerge. The death is described as the third UNIFIL casualty in weeks, increasing scrutiny on ceasefire durability. Market sensitivity is expected to stay high until clearer signals come from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu or Hezbollah leadership, since shifts in rhetoric or military posture are the most actionable triggers for these contracts. Overall, this Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire-related escalation risk can lift volatility expectations for event-driven derivatives, even if direct token fundamentals tied to this specific attack remain limited.
Neutral
Israel-Hezbollah CeasefireUNIFILLebanon ConflictPrediction MarketsGeopolitical Risk

Strait of Hormuz Blockade Lowers Odds of June Normalization

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The US Navy’s USS Rushmore is running blockade operations in the Arabian Sea as tensions persist around the Strait of Hormuz. In prediction markets, the chance of “June normalization” is priced at 30% (“YES”), down from 45% last week, suggesting traders expect a longer hardline posture rather than a quick diplomatic reset. The blockade is reported to involve about 10,000 personnel and more than a dozen ships. With roughly 73 days until the June deadline, odds for a return to normal Strait of Hormuz traffic remain guarded unless a diplomatic breakthrough emerges. A second Trump-linked contract tied to April oil-sanctions relief also weakened: “Trump agrees to Iran oil-saction relief by April” fell to 45% (“YES”) from 62% just 24 hours earlier. The move is linked to the US repositioning missile defenses to the Middle East, reducing expectations for near-term sanctions relief. Crypto market relevance: traders may reprice geopolitical risk quickly, which can lift volatility and compress risk appetite across broader markets. Near-term catalysts to watch are further Trump comments, the next Pentagon briefing, and remarks from Iranian representative Abbas Araghchi. USDC trading activity in the market was active over the past 24 hours, and the most Trump-sensitive contract shows high message-to-price sensitivity.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzUS Navy BlockadeIran SanctionsPrediction MarketsGeopolitical Risk

Iran Speaker Says U.S.-Iran Deal Far Away as Talks Continue and Ceasefire Holds

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Iranian parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Kalibaf said Iran accepted the ceasefire to express its demands. He described negotiations as a “struggle” and said Iran’s main goal is to advance and secure national rights within the current framework. On progress with the U.S., Kalibaf said talks have not removed mutual distrust. However, both sides have gained a more pragmatic understanding of each other, with some issues resolved and others still outstanding. He warned that there is still “a long way to go” before reaching a final U.S.-Iran agreement. Kalibaf also emphasized that Iran will not compromise on certain points and that those requirements are non-negotiable. For crypto traders, this signals ongoing geopolitical uncertainty. Even with a ceasefire in place, the lack of confidence and the long road to a final deal increase the probability of headline risk around U.S.-Iran negotiations—potentially affecting risk sentiment and demand for safe-haven liquidity.
Neutral
Iran-US negotiationsCeasefireGeopolitical riskMarket sentimentSafe-haven demand

Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire: odds stay 100% as army cites terms

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CryptoBriefing reports that the Israeli army says its Lebanon strikes fit within the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire terms. The key point for traders is how this sits against the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire prediction market. As of the article, contracts tied to the ceasefire show 100.0% YES for April 30 and 100.0% YES for June 30, with no new trades or repositioning despite the fresh Israeli statement. The March 31, 2026 ceasefire odds are expected to fall by 15% (per the platform’s note), but the longer-dated markets remain fully priced. The ceasefire took effect on April 16, 2026. It is described as allowing Israel to respond to “planned, imminent, or ongoing attacks,” while prohibiting offensive operations. Israel’s interpretation—framing current activity as defensive—creates a potential gap between market pricing (near-certain) and on-the-ground conditions. Why it matters for the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire: if Israel’s reading of what is permitted expands, the truce could erode faster than markets currently assume. With April/June contracts already at 100% YES, there is little room for this risk to be gradually absorbed, which could lead to sharp repricing if officials in Israel or Hezbollah signal escalation or renegotiation. What to watch next: statements from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hezbollah leadership.
Neutral
Israel-Hezbollah ceasefireprediction marketsLebanon conflictgeopolitical risktrading sentiment

US-Iran peace deal prediction market odds plunge after failed talks

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Iran’s parliament speaker said “major differences” remain with the US after failed Islamabad peace talks. That shift sharply cut traders’ confidence in a near-term US-Iran peace deal. In the US-Iran “Permanent Peace Deal” prediction market, the April 22 contract fell to 19.5% (down from 40%). The longer-term outlook also weakened: the April 30 odds dropped to 39.5% (from 61%), while June 30 eased to 67.5% (from a higher prior level). For the nuclear track, odds that Iran would surrender enriched uranium fell to 31.2% by April 30 (halved), with the largest single move later in the session. The December 31 enriched-uranium contract also dropped (to about 65.5% from ~80%). The article notes real conviction behind the move: moving the April 22 odds by 5 points reportedly requires about $9,404 in capital, and trading volume is sizable, with the peace-deal market posting about $1.64M/day in USDC. What to watch next is rhetoric from Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi and US envoy Steve Witkoff. A sudden diplomatic breakthrough within four days would be required to make the April 22 “YES” bet meaningfully attractive.
Bearish
US-Iran peace talksprediction marketsuranium negotiationsrisk sentimentUSDC trading

Harris accuses Netanyahu of pulling Trump into Iran conflict

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U.S. politics is increasingly shaping “Iran conflict” expectations in prediction markets. At a Detroit event, Vice President Kamala Harris accused Netanyahu of dragging Trump into a broader war with Iran, referencing “Operation Epic Fury” and framing the claim as political manipulation rather than a purely military development. Market pricing showed only small moves in the near-term risk of escalation. The “U.S. invasion of Iran” market edged to about 6.5% YES (after being ~7% the prior day). However, the “Iran operations announcement” market turned sharply bearish: the probability of ending military operations for April 21 fell to ~15.5% YES from ~38% just 24 hours earlier, indicating traders are pricing out an imminent cease-operations outcome. For the “U.S. declaration of war on Iran” contract, odds sat around 6.5% YES. The term structure suggested that any catalyst is viewed as more likely later in the year (a multi-point increase from April into December). Liquidity conditions matter: the market requires roughly $8,090 to move the contract by 5 points, and low USDC volume pointed to limited conviction on both sides. Takeaway for crypto traders: Harris’s comments may not change “military facts on the ground,” but they can increase headline-driven volatility and risk sentiment. A sharp repricing is most likely if Pentagon briefings or Congress rhetoric shift toward a formal “Iran declaration of war.”
Bearish
Iran conflictprediction marketsUS declaration of warUSDC liquiditygeopolitical risk

Stablecoins exit Ethereum as liquidity crunch hits traders

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Over 24 hours, more than $520M in stablecoins left Ethereum, signaling a liquidity crunch and a pullback in trader risk appetite. This comes as Ethereum’s market sentiment around $4,000 by April 30 is priced with only 15% “YES” probability, while the December 31 “YES” chance for $10,000 sits at 4% and is unchanged. Ethereum price-moving conditions appear fragile. Reported 24h USDC volume was just $420, and only $1,323 of activity was needed to shift “odds” by 5 percentage points—suggesting thin order-book depth where even smaller trades can meaningfully swing short-term probabilities. The stablecoin outflow compounds broader pressure on Ethereum tied to geopolitical tensions and ongoing regulatory scrutiny. Traders are also watching potential catalysts: protocol update announcements referenced from Vitalik Buterin and any SEC-related regulatory moves. For derivatives/prediction bettors, the setup implies stablecoins exit Ethereum is currently bearish for near-term confidence, with limited evidence of a rapid liquidity rebound. However, odds can shift quickly if new liquidity-supporting signals or regulatory clarity emerge.
Bearish
Ethereumstablecoin flowsliquidity crunchUSDCSEC risk

RaveDAO Denies RAVE Manipulation as Binance & Bitget Probe

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RaveDAO has denied accusations of market manipulation after its token RAVE surged from about $0.25 to nearly $28 in nine days, then crashed by over 80% to around $3.47. The sudden reversal has triggered renewed scrutiny over RAVE distribution, token supply concentration, and onchain timing. On X, the RaveDAO team said it is “not engaged in, nor responsible for” the recent price action. However, it did not directly address specific onchain claims raised by critics, including that roughly 90% of the total supply is held across three multi-signature wallets while circulating supply is estimated at about 24%. Independent analyst ZachXBT accused RaveDAO of orchestrating a pump-and-dump scheme. In response, exchanges moved to review related trading behavior. Bitget CEO Gracy Chen confirmed an internal investigation, and Binance co-CEO Richard Teng said Binance is also reviewing the case. Gate.io was also referenced in calls for further scrutiny. RaveDAO also discussed token unlock plans, saying it intends to sell portions of unlocked tokens to fund operations, hiring, and marketing. The team added it is considering performance-based token locks to better align incentives with long-term growth. For traders, the key signal is that RaveDAO and RAVE are now under exchange-level investigation amid extreme volatility, which can increase liquidation risk, widen spreads, and raise the probability of sudden listings/delisting or risk controls.
Bearish
RaveDAORAVE TokenExchange InvestigationMarket ManipulationTokenomics

IRGC Fires in Strait of Hormuz as UK Warship Passage Seen Unlikely

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The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) opened fire on a vessel in the Strait of Hormuz, tightening Iran’s control over a key chokepoint used to deter foreign military presence. A crypto-linked prediction market tracking whether the UK sends warships through the Strait of Hormuz by April 30, 2026 has fallen to 8.5% “YES” (from 12% a day earlier), implying traders now price a lower probability of UK passage amid heightened danger. The reported odds move about 3.5 percentage points in 24 hours, in a thin market where large orders can swing prices. Trading conditions were also highlighted: 24h volume is about $1,412 in USDC, and it costs roughly $304 to move the market by 5 points. The largest odds jump in the prior 24 hours was a 2-point spike before the market settled. If the UK challenges Iran’s control, the asymmetric payoff for the “YES” position is cited as 11.76x at an 8.5¢ price, but the IRGC firing is the main reason traders see passage as unlikely. Key catalysts to watch include statements from the UK Ministry of Defence, any Royal Navy movement toward the Persian Gulf, and shifts in diplomacy involving President Macron or Sultan Al Jaber—any of which could move the Strait of Hormuz probabilities sharply.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzIRGCGeopolitical RiskUK WarshipsPrediction Markets

Strait of Hormuz: US-Iran peace deal odds drop before April 22 deadline

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Crypto traders are watching event-driven geopolitics as conflicting signals on the Strait of Hormuz weaken expectations for a US-Iran peace deal by April 22. Prediction markets repriced fast: the April 22 contract’s YES odds fell to 19.5% from 40% in a day, and the April 30 contract dropped to 39.5% from 61%. The biggest move cited was a 5-point drop around 5:56 PM. The term structure still suggests timing risk. Odds rise after April 30, reaching about 58% across the April 30–May 31 window and ~67.5% into June 30, implying traders expect resolution later rather than immediately. Liquidity/friction matters for how quickly the Strait of Hormuz narrative can move prices. Moving the April 22 deal price by 5 points is estimated to require ~$9,366 of market depth (thicker than the ceasefire market, which is thinner). USDC volume cited is about $1.64M daily. Traders are also pricing ceasefire breakdown risk, with odds for Trump ending the ceasefire by April 21 rising sharply. Key watch: fresh language from Trump and Iran’s responses (including IRNA/Truth Social updates). Any shift could reprice US-Iran peace deal probabilities ahead of the April 22 deadline.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzUS-Iran diplomacyPrediction marketsGeopolitical riskUSDC liquidity

Hormuz risks: Iran’s unpredictability cools Trump talks

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Iran’s “erratic” stance on the Strait of Hormuz is raising doubts about its reliability as a negotiating partner, according to Lisa Daftari’s analysis. Traders are showing limited confidence that major diplomacy will happen soon, despite ongoing geopolitical noise. In the prediction markets covered, the odds of WTI crude hitting $160 in April remain low. A “YES” share tied to that outcome is around 1.4¢, offering high theoretical upside (about 71x), but the market still expects no drastic escalation. The likelihood of a Trump–Iran meeting by April 30 has also fallen—from 22% to 13%—suggesting skepticism about any imminent breakthrough. Market reaction has been muted. The article notes that even when WTI saw a recent 25-point spike, it failed to hold, and a smaller 6-point move was short-lived. This points to cautious positioning rather than panic. Liquidity is thin in both areas, which can amplify moves if headlines change. However, current pricing implies traders do not expect a sharp shift soon. Key triggers to watch include escalated military activity in the Strait of Hormuz, White House announcements on diplomatic engagement, or changes in rhetoric from Trump or Iran’s Supreme Leader. For crypto traders, this matters mainly via risk sentiment and macro spillovers. While Hormuz headlines can drive oil volatility, the market-implied probability of near-term escalation or meetings is currently restrained.
Neutral
IranStrait of HormuzWTI OilPrediction MarketsTrump-Iran Talks

Strait of Hormuz cleared after Iranian ship attacks; shipping halt odds near zero

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The Strait of Hormuz has been “cleared” after Iranian attacks on commercial ships, according to a lower-tier source. In the Strait of Hormuz ship-transit prediction market, fewer than 10 ships were expected to transit between April 13–19, and the contract is priced at about 0.4% YES. With one day left in the resolution window, traders are pricing in almost no chance of a full shipping halt. Market reaction shows early spikes early this morning, but odds remain around 0.4% YES. On the warship side, the contract for the UK sending warships through the Strait by April 30 fell to 8.5% YES (from 12% the previous day), suggesting traders do not expect a formal naval response soon. Liquidity is thin in the Strait of Hormuz ship market: only ~$14 total USDC traded, where ~$12 can move the market by 5 points. The warship market is far thicker: ~$5,648 USDC traded, requiring ~$304 to shift 5 points. The article also flags that the information comes from a tier-3 source, raising the possibility of noise rather than real escalation. For traders, a YES bet on ship transit at ~0.4¢ pays ~$1 on resolution (about 250x), but it depends on Iran maintaining aggressive posture and zero ships transiting. Key watch items include updates from the UK Ministry of Defence and CENTCOM.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzIran geopolitical riskprediction marketsUSDC liquiditynaval response odds