Trump extended the US-Iran ceasefire indefinitely, shifting focus to economic pressure. The likelihood of the ceasefire ending soon now sits at
Market reaction
The removal of a fixed deadline has reshaped the ceasefire end market. Without an end date, there is no trigger for immediate military action, and odds for the ceasefire ending are expected to drop sharply. The permanent peace deal by April 30 market has plummeted to
Why it matters
The term structure tells the story. The May 31 market sits at
The indefinite ceasefire also lowered expectations for oil price spikes. Odds of WTI hitting $160 in April sit at
The ceasefire represents a shift toward economic measures over military conflict, a strategy aimed at exhausting Iran’s resources without direct confrontation. For traders, this moves the action from short-term military bets to longer-term diplomatic timelines. Buying YES at
What to watch
Statements from Trump or US envoys Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff. Their communications would signal whether this indefinite ceasefire is a prelude to a broader peace framework or a strategic pause.
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