Iran’s National Security Committee is demanding that negotiations conform to national interests, and the market for Trump agreeing to Iranian oil sanction relief in April has dropped to 43% YES, down from 62% a day ago.
Market reaction
The oil sanction relief market fell over 14 points in 24 hours as traders priced in skepticism about a breakthrough. Negotiations have stalled, and Iran’s insistence on national interest makes imminent US concessions less plausible. The enrichment rights market shows the same pessimism, also at 43% YES.
Why it matters
Combined 24-hour face value is at $44,402, with $23,733 in actual USDC. The cost to move the market is $816 per 5 points, meaning moderate liquidity that a single large order could swing. The largest recent move was a 6-point drop, showing how sensitive this market is to geopolitical signals.
Iran’s position makes a US agreement on oil sanction relief unlikely this month. The source tier for the committee’s statement is low, but the market’s 14-point reaction tells its own story. A YES share at 43¢ pays $1 if resolved, a 2.08x return, but that requires a diplomatic shift before month’s end.
What to watch
Any comments from Trump, or shifts in negotiation dynamics through Oman or Qatar, would be the most direct catalysts for movement in either direction.
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Source: https://cryptobriefing.com/iran-demands-national-interest-in-talks-us-oil-sanction-relief-unlikely/








