From April 13 to April 16, 2026, the price of Option 'Yes' quickly fell back from 86.5c to 74c. This was due to fading inflation panic and dovish comments from some ECB officials reiterating concerns over downside economic risks, leading the market to correct previously overheated rate-hike expectations.
From April 12 to April 13, 2026, the price of Option 'Yes' surged from 77c to 86.5c as fears of short-term geopolitical conflict escalation intensified, causing a jump in energy prices and rapidly stoking market panic over secondary inflation in the Eurozone.
From April 8 to April 10, 2026, the price of Option 'Yes' quickly rebounded from 59.5c to 75c. This was driven by renewed geopolitical tensions in the Middle East causing a spike in energy prices, sparking market panic over persistent sticky inflation in the Eurozone and a swift resurgence in rate-hike expectations.
From April 7 to April 8, 2026, the price of Option 'Yes' plunged from 82c to 59.5c as weak Eurozone macroeconomic data was released, leading markets to temporarily assume that downside growth risks would force the ECB to abandon further tightening this year.
From March 31 to April 2, 2026, the price of Option 'Yes' dropped rapidly from 84c to 70.5c as end-of-month inflation panic subsided and market expectations briefly rose that weak economic data might force the ECB to pause rate hikes.
From March 25 to March 26, 2026, the price of Option 'Yes' plunged from 84.5c to 63c as market sentiment cooled after the recent rate-hike panic, likely driven by stabilizing energy prices or dovish pushback from ECB officials, which corrected the previously overstated hike expectations.
From March 18 to March 20, 2026, the price of Option 'Yes' surged from 44.5c to 65.5c. This was driven by the unexpected hawkish signal from the March 19 ECB meeting—raising the 2026 inflation forecast to 2.6%—followed by major investment banks forecasting rate hikes this year, triggering a rapid market repricing.
From March 11 to March 13, 2026, the price of Option 'Yes' rebounded violently from 32c to 54.5c due to panic hedging against sudden geopolitical tail risks (Middle East tensions), causing prices to temporarily decouple from the low-inflation fundamental anchor.
From March 10 to March 11, 2026, the price of Option 'Yes' dropped rapidly from 46c to 32c as the market briefly reverted to rational pricing based on weak macro data.
From Feb 10 to Feb 11, 2026, the price of Option 'Yes' retraced from 15c to 12c as the market digested the low 1.7% inflation print and corrected the hawkish risk premium.