U.S. crude exports are on track to reach 5.2 million barrels per day in April as the Iran conflict disrupts global supply routes. The Polymarket contract for crude oil hitting an all-time high by April 30 sits at 1.1% YES.
Market reaction
The export surge follows the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, with 68 empty tankers racing toward U.S. ports and Asian demand up 82%. The Crude Oil all-time high by April 30 contract sits at 1.1% YES, down from 2% just 24 hours ago. The WTI Crude Oil $160 April contract hasn’t moved meaningfully either. With six days until resolution, traders appear unconvinced that record prices are coming, even with exports running this high.
Why it matters
Only $2,513 in USDC has traded on the all-time high contract over the past day. It takes just $695 to move the price 5 percentage points, so a handful of traders can swing the odds substantially. The thinness of this market makes the current odds unreliable as a consensus signal.
Trump’s price controls have made American crude cheaper relative to global benchmarks, which is why international buyers are flooding U.S. ports. But the drop from 2% to 1.1% in 24 hours suggests traders think the export boom alone won’t push crude to record levels without further escalation.
What to watch
Ceasefire negotiations around the Strait of Hormuz are the main variable. A reopening would relieve supply pressure and likely push odds lower. Conversely, any further geopolitical escalation or changes in U.S. export policy could move the contract sharply given how little volume it takes to shift prices.
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