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Polymarket odds price 16.5% chance of U.S. invading Iran before 2027
Rongchai Wang
Jul 09, 2026 06:03
Markets turned risk-off after Donald Trump said a ceasefire with Iran was “over,” following U.S. strikes tied to attacks on three ships in the Strait of Hormuz as Brent jumped 5.2% to $78.02.
Polymarket odds price 16.5% chance of U.S. invading Iran before 2027
Polymarket Reprices “U.S. Invade Iran Before 2027?” After Ceasefire Doubts and Hormuz Risk Headlines
Polymarket traders pushed the “Will the U.S. invade Iran before 2027?” contract up to 16.5% Yes (83.5% No) on about $40.1M in volume. The move followed fresh headlines around the Iran conflict and energy-market stress, offering a clear read on how fast a continuously traded market reprices escalation risk.
Key Takeaways
A broad risk-off session followed comments from U.S. President Donald Trump suggesting a ceasefire with Iran was “over,” after U.S. strikes on Iran tied to attacks on three ships in the Strait of Hormuz. The report also described oil jumping (Brent up 5.2% to $78.02, briefly above $80) alongside shaky global equities, with concerns centered on potential disruption through the Strait and knock-on inflation and rates.
Market Reaction: 16.5% Yes vs 83.5% No on $40.1M Volume, With a +5.0-Point Odds Jump From 11.5%
This is a binary Polymarket contract: a “Yes” share pays out only if an invasion occurs before the 2026-12-31 resolution date; at 16.5% Yes / 83.5% No, the market is still firmly pricing “No” as the base case even after the repricing. The headline-driven jump from 11.5% to 16.5% is a meaningful +5.0 percentage-point shift in implied probability, but it sits against a historical backdrop labeled “stable” consensus and “moderate” volatility, with a -2.0 point move over both the last 24 hours and 7 days in the summary. That mix—today’s discrete spike higher, yet a bearish/moderate-momentum profile in the summary—signals disagreement around near-term escalation risk rather than a clean trend break. With roughly $40.1M matched, the contract has enough participation that these probability moves function as a real-time aggregation mechanism, updating faster than traditional narrative cycles while still leaving the “No” outcome dominant.
Watch whether the market can hold above the mid-teens in Yes: a sustained bid would suggest traders are upgrading the chance that recent conflict signals translate into an invasion definition before the 2026-12-31 cutoff. If odds fade back toward the low teens while volume continues to build, it would indicate the headline impulse was sold into and the market is reverting to its prior baseline.
Related Polymarket Contracts Traders Monitor Next: Oil-Spike, Inflation/Rates, and Broader Risk-Off Macro Markets
Beyond the headline contract, traders often cross-check sentiment by watching adjacent Polymarket markets that price the same story through different, more time-boxed triggers. Right now that includes 22.5% on “Iran announces withdrawal from MOU negotiations by…?” (August 15) on $3.56M volume, 36.5% on “US-Iran Final Nuclear Deal by…?” (December 31) on $8.90M, 25.5% on “Iran full airspace closure by…?” (August 31) on $1.99M, and 95.5% on “Strait of Hormuz traffic returns to normal by July 31?” (No) on $13.55M—useful comparables for whether traders are leaning toward de-escalation timelines or further disruption.
Odds Trend
| Window | Change (pp) | | --- | --- | | 24h | -2.0 | | 7d | -2.0 |
Implied odds (last 48h)Odds %Will the U.S. invade Iran b…
By the Numbers
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