The U.S. has spent $25 billion on its military operations against Iran, according to a senior Pentagon official. The probability of a U.S.-Iran ceasefire by April 30 is at
Daily military costs exceeding $1 billion point to continued hostilities, not wind-down. Traders have responded by pushing ceasefire odds lower, and the April 30 ceasefire market is now approaching expiration with almost no movement.
The market trades $50,697 in daily USDC volume. It takes $5,457 to move the price 5 points, indicating a thick order book. The largest move in the past 24 hours was a 1-point spike, consistent with stable sentiment against a ceasefire.
The Pentagon’s $25 billion figure confirms the conflict is entrenched, making a near-term ceasefire less likely, not more. With no formal end to hostilities and daily costs above $1 billion, this is a bearish signal for any immediate resolution. Buying YES at
Watch for any movement from intermediaries like Oman or Qatar, or signals from Trump or CENTCOM indicating a shift in strategy. A sudden diplomatic event could disrupt current pricing.
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