Putin scales back Victory Day parade amid Ukrainian strike concerns

1 hour ago 10

Putin’s decision to downsize the May 9 Victory Day parade by excluding military vehicles signals Russian concern over potential Ukrainian strikes. The odds for a Russia-Ukraine ceasefire by April 30, 2026, sit at 0.1% YES.

Market reaction

The April 30 contract is flat at 0.1%, unchanged from 24 hours ago but down from 1% a week prior. The May 31 market sits at 3.3% YES, down from 4% just 24 hours ago. The term structure shows traders expect no diplomatic breakthroughs in the immediate future.

Why it matters

The ceasefire market sees a combined $3,737 in daily USDC volume. The April 30 contract trades $1,480 in daily USDC, with just $875 needed to move the price five points, making it a thin market easily swayed by large orders. The May 31 contract, with $2,257 daily USDC volume and $3,306 required for a five-point move, is somewhat more resilient but still sensitive to size. The largest recent move was a 50-point spike in the April 30 market at 11:40 AM, showing how quickly these thin books can gap.

Removing military vehicles from the parade is a concrete acknowledgment of Ukraine’s long-range strike capabilities. That defensive posture is consistent with the bearish pricing across ceasefire contracts. At 1¢, a YES share on the April 30 ceasefire contract offers a 100x return, but that would require a surprise diplomatic breakthrough within 24 hours.

What to watch

Further Russian military repositioning or Ukrainian strikes that could change the tactical situation. Any diplomatic activity from the U.S. or EU that might indicate back-channel negotiations.

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