Prediction market traders now see a 75% probability that U.S. gas prices will exceed $3.50 a gallon on Election Day, as the collapse of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire injects a fresh geopolitical risk premium into energy markets.
Prediction market traders now see a 75% probability that U.S. gas prices will exceed $3.50 a gallon on Election Day, as the collapse of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire injects a fresh geopolitical risk premium into energy markets.

The end of the fragile ceasefire in the Strait of Hormuz sent crude oil prices surging 7% Wednesday and wiped more than 800 points off the Dow, as traders priced in a prolonged disruption to the waterway that handles 21% of global oil trade.
"Prediction markets have consistently underestimated how long this disruption would last, treating each escalation as a temporary shock when the pattern increasingly looks structural," said Pham Binh, senior analyst at IBTimes covering conflict and energy markets.
Brent crude jumped about 7% on Wednesday, though prices remain below their spring peaks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1.5% after hitting a record high just two days earlier. Kalshi contracts now price only a 44% probability of normal Strait traffic resuming by Dec. 1, with January 2027 becoming the first month where normalization is priced as more likely than not at 53%. That marks a dramatic shift from March, when traders assigned a 76% probability to a July 1 reopening.
The renewed hostilities threaten to embed a structural risk premium into energy prices that complicates the Federal Reserve's inflation fight. CME FedWatch data shows investors now see a better-than-1-in-3 chance the Fed will raise rates this month, up from about 1-in-4 before the ceasefire broke down. The IMF has already downgraded its 2026 global growth forecast to 3%, down from 3.5% last year, warning that "the possibility of renewed Middle East conflict looms large."
Gas Prices and the Election Calculus
Kalshi traders now assign 75% odds that U.S. gasoline will cost more than $3.50 a gallon on Nov. 3, and 39% probability that prices exceed $3.75, according to the prediction market's latest contracts. Retail gasoline prices rose less than a penny overnight following Wednesday's strikes, AAA data shows, but the full pass-through of higher crude costs typically takes one to two weeks.
The gas price outlook carries political weight in a midterm election year. The national average had fallen below $4 a gallon after the brief ceasefire in June, offering relief to consumers and the White House alike. That reprieve now appears short-lived.
The New Normal Question
For five consecutive months, Kalshi forecasts have pushed back the expected reopening date for the Strait of Hormuz. The pattern raises a question that markets have been reluctant to confront: what if the current cycle of tit-for-tat strikes is not a temporary disruption but the new baseline?
Saudi Arabia's East-West Pipeline and the UAE's Habshan-Fujairah pipeline — both built as alternative routes bypassing the Strait — were attacked by Iran in April and May, respectively, highlighting the difficulty of finding workarounds. Citi has warned that oil prices could surge to $130 a barrel if the Strait remains closed.
A permanently unstable Strait would force energy companies to accelerate investment in overland pipelines and strategic reserves, while strengthening the long-term case for renewables and nuclear power. But in the near term, the most immediate effect is higher costs for manufacturers, airlines and consumers — transmitted through every link in the global supply chain.
Fed Under Pressure
The renewed uncertainty arrives at a delicate moment for the Federal Reserve under new Chairman Kevin Warsh. Inflation has already run well above the central bank's 2% target, pushed higher by energy costs since the conflict began in February. The Trump administration is also preparing a new round of global tariffs, which could add further upward pressure on import prices in the second half of the year.
The last time the U.S. faced a comparable energy supply shock — the 1973 Arab oil embargo — inflation surged above 11% and the economy entered a deep recession. While the current situation is not analogous in scale, the direction of travel is what concerns central bankers: geopolitical events driving inflation higher, rather than excess demand, making it harder to tame with interest rate hikes alone.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.