Edge scans prediction markets for mispriced contracts — where the money disagrees with the news. This week’s sharpest opportunities across geopolitics, macro, and world events.
5 markets. Real data. Audin’s take on each.
JD Vance is in Islamabad negotiating with Iran’s foreign minister as the ceasefire clock ticks toward April 21. WTI dropped below $100 on the ceasefire headline but Brent spot hit $120 on the reality that the Strait of Hormuz is still functionally closed — 7 vessels in 24 hours vs. 140 normal. The Supreme Court’s IEEPA tariff ruling is forcing a $130B refund question, and the Fed is frozen at 3.5-3.75% with zero cuts priced as the most likely 2026 outcome.
Tehran sees the ceasefire as leverage, not capitulation. Iran’s 10-point proposal demands sanctions relief, enrichment rights, Hormuz transit fees, and security guarantees — and Vance calling it a ‘workable basis’ signals Washington may be more flexible than the hawks want. The 230 loaded oil tankers sitting inside the Gulf represent $20B+ in stranded crude. Every day the Strait stays closed costs the global economy $1.5B. Pakistan is playing kingmaker, and the Gulf states are quietly furious that their production is down 13 million bpd with no end in sight.
This is the week the Iran war moved from the battlefield to the negotiating table. VP Vance landed in Islamabad Friday morning for trilateral talks with Iran’s Araghchi and Pakistan’s mediators. The ceasefire — now four days old — has survived Israeli strikes on Lebanon that Tehran called violations, a Saudi pipeline attack that cut 600,000 bpd, and Trump threatening to bomb every bridge and power plant in Iran if talks fail.
Prediction markets are doing what they do best: pricing the gap between headlines and reality. The ceasefire exists. The Strait doesn’t reopen. Oil dropped 16% on the announcement, then Brent spot hit $120 because physical markets know the difference between a press release and a tanker transit. The crowd is splitting the difference — betting the ceasefire survives but the peace doesn’t.
Meanwhile, the domestic macro picture is getting interesting. The Fed is stuck. Oil above $100 means inflation stays hot. But the economy is showing cracks — recession odds are climbing even as jobs data beats. And zero Fed rate cuts in 2026 is now the single most likely outcome on Polymarket. The oil shock hasn’t fully transmitted yet. When it does, these markets move.
This week’s markets where the price doesn’t match the probability.
The market says there’s a 71% chance this ceasefire gets extended past its April 21 deadline, with 19% pricing extension by April 14. $280M has traded across Iran ceasefire markets since the war began February 28 — this is the most liquid geopolitical market on the platform. What the money says: Heavy one-sided flow toward extension. The ceasefire-broken market has April 21 at just 31%, meaning traders see a 69% chance it survives that date. The extension and breakdown markets are internally consistent — rare for Polymarket — which suggests informed money is driving both. What the news says: Vance landed in Islamabad this morning. Iran’s Araghchi is at the table. Pakistan is mediating. The talks are described as ‘largely positive’ with a stalemate on Hormuz control. Tehran’s 10-point proposal includes enrichment rights, sanctions relief, and Hormuz transit fees. Washington wants zero enrichment and toll-free Hormuz. Audin’s Take: 71% for extension feels right — maybe even low. Both sides need more time. Trump can’t bomb Iran while Vance is in Pakistan. Iran can’t reopen Hormuz without a sanctions deal. The incentive structure screams ‘extend and pretend.’ BUYER at 71¢. The real question isn’t whether the ceasefire extends — it’s whether the extension produces anything beyond another extension. Watch for language shifts from ‘workable basis’ to ‘significant progress’ as the tell. Polymarket: https://polymarket.com/event/us-x-iran-ceasefire-extended-by *This is commentary and analysis for informational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before trading.*
Here’s the number that matters: 71% for a ceasefire extension, but only 39% for a permanent deal by May 31. That 32-point gap is the market pricing six weeks of negotiations that produce nothing lasting. $280M+ in total Iran market volume says this isn’t thin-market noise. What the money says: The term structure tells the story. Ceasefire extension: 71%. Permanent deal by May 31: 39%. Nuclear deal by April 30: 21%. The market is pricing a slow diplomatic grind with declining probability at each escalation of commitment. Traders believe in talks, not outcomes. What the news says: The gap between the sides is enormous. Iran wants enrichment rights — Washington’s stated red line is zero enrichment in Iran. Iran wants sanctions lifted — the US wants verifiable dismantlement first. Iran wants Hormuz transit fees — Trump called that ‘extortion.’ Republican senators are already saying any nuclear deal needs Senate approval, which functionally means no deal. Audin’s Take: 39% for a permanent deal by May 31 is generous. SELLER at 39¢. The positions are too far apart. Zero enrichment vs. enrichment rights is not a split-the-difference negotiation — it’s a binary. The Senate poison pill makes formal agreements nearly impossible. The most likely outcome is rolling ceasefires with incremental Hormuz reopening, not a grand bargain. The 39% price reflects hope, not probability. Polymarket: https://polymarket.com/event/us-x-iran-permanent-peace-deal-by *This is commentary and analysis for informational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before trading.*
75¢ for WTI touching $120 this month, even as the front-month contract sits at $96.37 after falling below $100 on ceasefire news. That’s a market betting the ceasefire doesn’t fix the supply problem. $20.4M traded — serious money. What the money says: This market resolved 100% for ↑$110 (already hit). The $120 bucket sits at 75%, implying traders see a three-in-four chance WTI spikes $24+ from current levels this month. The $130 bucket would tell us more about tail risk but the $120 price is the consensus ceiling for now. What the news says: Brent spot already hit $120 on April 8 — physical oil is ahead of futures. The Strait of Hormuz is handling 7 vessels per day vs. 140 normal. 13 million bpd of Middle East production is shut in. Goldman says another month of Hormuz closure means $100+ Brent for all of 2026. Saudi pipeline attacks cut an additional 600,000 bpd. The UAE’s state oil chief said the strait ‘remains largely shut to shipping’ despite the ceasefire. Audin’s Take: 75% is the right neighborhood. HOLDER — not adding at this price. The ceasefire created a $96 entry point for anyone who missed the run-up, but the physical market is screaming that $120 is a matter of when, not if. Seven tankers a day through a strait that normally handles 140 isn’t a reopening — it’s a rounding error. The risk is a dramatic breakthrough in Islamabad that sends oil down $15 in an hour. But at 75¢, that risk is already priced. Fair value. Polymarket: https://polymarket.com/event/what-price-will-wti-hit-in-april-2026 *This is commentary and analysis for informational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before trading.*
Zero Fed rate cuts is now the single most likely outcome for 2026 at 32.5%, beating one cut (25.5%) and two cuts (21.5%). The April FOMC is priced at 98% hold. The Fed is frozen and the market knows it. What the money says: The distribution is telling. 32.5% for zero cuts, 25.5% for one, 21.5% for two. That’s 79% of the probability mass sitting at two cuts or fewer. Just months ago the market was pricing 3-4 cuts as the base case. The oil shock repriced the entire rate path. CME FedWatch shows near-certainty of holds through June. What the news says: The Fed held at 3.5-3.75% in March. March payrolls came in hot at 178K, beating estimates. Unemployment held at 4.3%. But beneath the surface: oil above $100 is an inflation accelerant that hasn’t fully hit CPI yet. RSM cut GDP forecasts from 2.4% to 1.7%. The oil shock is a classic stagflationary impulse — weak growth, hot prices — and the Fed has no good move. Audin’s Take: Zero cuts at 32.5% is underpriced. BUYER at 32.5¢. The Fed was cutting into an oil shock and then stopped. Now they’re stuck in a cage: cut and inflation runs hotter from $100+ oil; hold and the economy softens under energy costs. Powell’s revealed preference is to hold — he held in March with Brent at $110. He’ll hold in April with Brent at $120. The only scenario that produces cuts is a hard landing, and by then the recession market will be at 50%+. Zero cuts for 2026 should be 40-45%. Polymarket: https://polymarket.com/event/how-many-fed-rate-cuts-in-2026 *This is commentary and analysis for informational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before trading.*
88¢ for a full Democratic wave in November — both the House and 49+ Senate seats. That’s near-certainty pricing seven months before Election Day, driven by a 6-point generic ballot lead, 35+ Republican retirements, and an oil-shock economy battering the incumbent party. What the money says: $4.4M traded on the House market alone. Democrats at 86.5% for the House, and the full Blue Wave package at 88%. The balance-of-power market has full Democratic sweep at 51%. The Senate remains the tighter race — Democrats only need to hold current seats while Republicans defend in tough territory. Cook Political Report shifted 5 districts toward Democrats on April 8. What the news says: CNN polling shows Democrats +6 on the generic ballot — matching 2018 wave margins. Republicans hold a razor-thin 218-214 House majority, meaning Democrats need just 3 seats. 35+ Republican incumbents are retiring. The oil shock is hitting swing-district economics hard. But it’s April — seven months of war, oil prices, and economic data stand between now and November. Audin’s Take: 88% is rich for April. Mild SELLER at 88¢ — but this is a contrarian position against strong fundamentals. The political gravity is real: midterms punish the president’s party, the economy is weakening, and the margin is razor-thin. But 88% in April for a November event leaves almost no room for surprises — a dramatic peace deal, an oil price collapse, a strong jobs recovery, or simply the normal mean-reversion of polls. The models cluster at 69% for a reason. The Polymarket premium is either informed money seeing wave dynamics early, or overconfidence. At 88¢, the risk-reward favors NO. Polymarket: https://polymarket.com/event/blue-wave-in-2026 *This is commentary and analysis for informational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before trading.*
| Markets analyzed | 5 |
| Highest conviction | Zero Fed cuts 2026 — BUYER at 32.5¢ |
| Biggest volume | Iran ceasefire — $280M+ total |
| Most mispriced | Permanent peace deal — 39¢ vs Audin’s ~20¢ fair value |