Will Strait of Hormuz Ship Traffic Reach Normal Levels by June 30 2026?
This market will resolve to “Yes” if IMF Portwatch publishes a 7-day moving average of transit calls (“Arrivals of Ships”) for the Strait of Hormuz equal to or…
Strait of Hormuz traffic returns to normal by end of June?
Strait of Hormuz traffic returns to normal by end of June?

Price, depth and useful dates
An editorial view of the signal: what leads, how much activity is behind it, and which date carries the risk.
Binary market
What is happening now
The Strait of Hormuz remains a critical chokepoint for global energy and trade flows, with shipping activity closely monitored amid ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. As of early June 2026, the market is pricing in an 81.5% probability that transit traffic has not returned to normal levels by the June 30 deadline. The IMF Portwatch data, which tracks ship arrivals at the strait, has been the authoritative source for this binary outcome. Current spot freight rates and insurance costs for tankers transiting the region remain elevated compared to pre-tension periods, suggesting sustained disruption to normal operations.
How the market is structured
This is a binary market with two outcomes: Yes (18.5%) and No (81.5%). The market resolves to “Yes” if IMF Portwatch publishes a 7-day moving average of transit calls equal to or above 60 for any date through June 30, 2026. Otherwise it resolves to “No.” The threshold of 60 transit calls appears calibrated to represent pre-disruption baseline activity levels. The market has $12.5 million in total volume and $253,000 in liquidity as it approaches the final month of the resolution period.
Leading outcome: No (81.5%)
The “No” outcome currently leads, indicating the market believes traffic levels have not recovered to the 60-call threshold. This suggests either current transit volumes remain below this level or the data collection window has not yet shown sustained recovery above the threshold.
Alternative outcome: Yes (18.5%)
The “Yes” outcome requires a sustained period where the 7-day moving average of ship arrivals reaches or exceeds 60 calls per day. Given the market’s proximity to the June 30 deadline, this would require a significant and immediate rebound in shipping activity.
Path to the leading outcome
For the “No” outcome to hold, IMF Portwatch must either:
- Never publish a 7-day moving average at or above 60 through June 30, 2026
- Experience data publication delays that result in resolution based on existing data showing levels below threshold
Current indicators supporting this path include sustained elevated freight rates, continued insurance premiums above historical norms, and potential rerouting of some cargo through alternative chokepoints like the Suez Canal or around Africa.
What could change the pricing
Several developments could shift the market toward “Yes”:
- Sudden de-escalation in Middle East tensions leading to immediate resumption of normal shipping schedules
- IMF Portwatch data revisions showing a sharp increase in transit calls above the 60-threshold level
- Government or maritime authority announcements confirming restoration of normal navigation protocols in the strait
- Significant drop in freight rates and insurance costs indicating return to pre-tension shipping economics
Conversely, further escalation or prolonged uncertainty would reinforce the “No” outcome, though the market is already heavily priced for this scenario.
Editorial read
This market reflects genuine uncertainty about the operational status of one of the world’s most critical shipping corridors. With nearly $12.5 million in volume and a June 30 resolution date, participants are essentially betting on whether geopolitical stability will translate into measurable shipping recovery within a specific timeframe. The 81.5% probability assigned to “No” suggests the market is pricing in either insufficient data recovery or continued below-normal traffic levels. The binary structure makes this a clean indicator of whether the Strait of Hormuz has returned to baseline operational capacity—a question of direct relevance to global supply chains, energy markets, and maritime insurance sectors.
This analysis is provided for informational and editorial purposes only. Market signal prices reflect market-implied expectations, not verified outcomes or recommendations. Markets can be illiquid, volatile, and subject to ambiguous resolution criteria.