Japan’s Painting Association has flagged potential thinner shortages due to disrupted naphtha supplies from the Iran war. The Bank of Japan’s April rate cut likelihood sits at 0.1% YES, unchanged from a week ago.
Japan depends heavily on Middle Eastern naphtha, and Strait of Hormuz blockages threaten that supply. The Bank of Japan rate cut market remains static at 0.1% YES. Daily trades total $9,950 in face value but only $19 in actual USDC, making this a thin market easily moved by small positions.
Just $82 would shift odds by 5 percentage points. The flat response suggests traders don’t see the thinner shortage as a rate-cut trigger. If tensions escalate, though, odds in a market this thin could move fast.
The Iran conflict compounds Japan’s existing import dependencies. A YES share at 0.1¢ pays $1 if a cut occurs, a potential 1000x return. That payout is speculative and depends on supply chain disruptions severe enough to force the BOJ’s hand.
Watch for statements from Governor Ueda or BOJ board members. Any signal of concern over supply chain strains could tilt this market.
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Source: https://cryptobriefing.com/japan-faces-thinner-shortages-amid-iran-conflict-supply-chain-concerns/







