US sanctions on China’s Hengli Petrochemical and ~40 shipping entities target Iran’s shadow oil fleet. Iran’s enrichment stockpile surrender by April 30 sits at 6% YES, down from 65% a week ago.
Market reaction
The sanctions target China’s oil imports from Iran. The immediate reaction in the April 30 uranium stockpile market shows traders expect Iran to double down, not concede. The December 31 market is at 41.5% YES, down from 80% seven days ago — a near-halving in one week.
Why it matters
Iran’s stockpile concession odds have fallen steeply over the last week. The term structure shows a 21-point jump between April 30 and June 30: traders see no immediate breakthrough but price in possible developments by summer. The June 30 market is at 27.5% YES, an outside chance of progress within 67 days.
What to watch
These markets saw $39,286 in USDC traded over the past 24 hours. The April 30 market requires $9,564 to move prices by 5 points, giving a sense of both the available liquidity and the volatility any substantial order creates.
The sanctions add pressure but are unlikely to produce an immediate diplomatic result. Iran’s position has hardened through previous rounds of economic pressure. A YES share in the April 30 market at 6¢ pays $1 if resolved, a 16.7x return.
Watch for statements from Iran’s Supreme Leader or any US movement on sanction relief. The ongoing US-Iran talks and any involvement from mediators like Turkey could also shift odds quickly.
API access
Get prediction market intelligence as a structured API feed. Early access waitlist.
Source: https://cryptobriefing.com/us-sanctions-target-chinas-hengli-petrochemical-over-iranian-oil-imports/







