Iran has opted to skip direct talks with the US in Islamabad, choosing instead to convey its position through Pakistan. The odds of a ceasefire by April 30 now sit at
Iran’s decision to bypass direct engagement with the US has traders pricing in a lack of immediate diplomatic progress. The April 30 ceasefire market sits at
The market trades $2,829,420 in daily face value, but only $66,661 in actual USDC changes hands, a gap that reflects how much of the activity is low-cost, high-leverage positioning rather than large capital commitment. It takes over $111,818 to move the market 5 percentage points, making price action relatively stable. The largest single move was the 48-point spike, driven by large orders.
Iran’s choice to communicate via Pakistan rather than meeting directly signals uncertainty in diplomatic channels. Traders read this as bearish for a quick resolution. At
Keep an eye on any announcements from intermediaries like Oman or Qatar, any softening in rhetoric from Trump, or signs of back-channel negotiations.
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