Energy Secretary Chris Wright confirmed a quick reopening of the Strait of Hormuz via a safe shipping corridor. The market for 80 ships transiting by April 30 sits at
Market reaction
The market moved modestly on the limited clearance plan. Odds for 80 ships transiting by April 30 remain at
On oil, crude oil all-time high odds dropped to
Why it matters
The US choosing limited clearance rather than full demining reduces immediate supply disruption fears and takes pressure off oil prices. The collapse from 51% to 1% in one week on the ship transit market reflects how quickly traders repriced the likelihood of normal Hormuz traffic resuming before month-end.
What to watch
Actual USDC traded in the Strait of Hormuz market is $449, with $542 needed to move the price 5 points. That thin liquidity means a single large order could cause sharp swings. Crude oil markets are thicker, with $2,513 in USDC transacted in the last 24 hours.
Watch for updates from Admiral Brad Cooper at U.S. Central Command. Any confirmation of increased ship transit or an operational safe corridor could move these odds fast. At
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