The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world's most critical maritime chokepoints, with roughly 20–30% of global oil shipments and significant quantities of liquefied natural gas passing through its narrow waters daily. On May 31, market participants will have a clear answer to a fundamental question about maritime traffic through this strategic waterway: how many vessels will transit the strait each day? The three related prediction markets grouped here offer a granular look at what traders and analysts expect for transit volumes on that date. Rather than a single binary outcome, these markets divide the possible range into three consecutive bands—between zero and ten daily transits, between ten and twenty, and between twenty and forty—reflecting the spectrum of geopolitical, weather, and economic factors that influence shipping patterns through the region. By examining the probability prices across these three scenarios, you can see where the market consensus lies and where significant disagreement persists. A concentration of probability weight in the middle band would suggest confident expectations of normal operations; elevated prices on the low-transit scenario might reflect concerns about disruption or reduced demand; while higher probabilities on the high-transit band could indicate expectations of surge shipping or heightened commercial activity. These markets serve as real-time windows into what informed participants believe about May 31's maritime conditions—useful context for understanding broader energy markets, geopolitical risk assessments, and supply chain expectations.