Disrupted Iranian oil supplies to China are putting pressure on global oil markets. WTI Crude Oil prices for April 2026 trade at 0.8% YES to hit $160.
The conflict between Iran and the US-Israel coalition has cut into China’s oil imports, since Iran is a major supplier. This supply disruption is a bullish input for oil prices, though the 0.8% odds show traders consider a $160 WTI price in April extremely unlikely.
For the WTI Crude Oil market in April, the 0.8% YES odds are unchanged from 24 hours ago but down from 2% a week ago. Liquidity is thin: $1,955 would move the price 5 percentage points. Iranian supply disruption supports higher oil prices, but without further escalation or additional supply cuts, traders are pricing in very little chance of a spike to $160.
The market for Trump’s visit to China by May 31 shows 75.5% YES, down from 78% yesterday. China’s diplomatic efforts to de-escalate tensions support the likelihood of the visit going ahead. The June 30 deadline market sits at 83% YES, suggesting traders expect the visit to happen even if it slips past May.
This matters because sustained disruption to Iranian oil flowing to China, the world’s largest crude importer, would tighten global supply and push prices higher, with knock-on effects for trade balances and inflation. At 0.8¢, a YES share on WTI hitting $160 pays $1 if it resolves, a 125x return if tensions escalate far enough. Traders should weigh the low probability against the asymmetric payout.
Signals to watch: OPEC+ production decisions, any Chinese diplomatic moves to resolve the Iran conflict, and changes in Iranian export volumes. Each of these could shift both oil price markets and the odds on Trump’s China visit.
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Source: https://cryptobriefing.com/iran-oil-supply-disruption-pressures-global-markets-impacts-china-imports/








