- Both the Russian Ministry of Defense and the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine have confirmed that the short-term regional ceasefire agreement officially ended at 24:00 local time on May 11. The frontline geopolitical conflict has rapidly returned to a high-intensity state of engagement over the past 24 hours, with a total of 174 high-frequency combat contacts recorded.
- The military reports from both sides show a strong characteristic of drone attrition warfare. The Russian side stated that it struck 56 Ukrainian targets, including fuel depots and military airports, and shot down 108 fixed-wing drones. Meanwhile, Ukraine claimed to have repelled attacks in multiple directions and shot down up to 1,252 Russian drones, highlighting the high-frequency application of low-cost precision strike weapons on the modern battlefield.
- The expiration of the ceasefire agreement has directly reset the short-term risk pricing model of the global commodity market. Due to Russia's focus on striking infrastructure such as fuel depots, the risk premium for European natural gas benchmark Dutch TTF futures and Brent crude oil futures has significantly expanded, and concerns about the vulnerability of the energy supply chain in the Black Sea and Eastern Europe have risen again.
Damage to Energy Infrastructure and Reassessment of Risk Premiums
The renewed escalation of the conflict has precisely targeted energy and logistics nodes, injecting new uncertainty into the global energy market. The targeted strikes by Russian armed forces on fuel depots have effectively exacerbated the tension in the refined oil supply chain within the region. On a macro trading level, this physical destruction of energy infrastructure forces crude oil traders to re-incorporate geopolitical supply disruption risks into the Brent crude oil forward curve on the Intercontinental Exchange. If the frequency of similar attacks on refineries or storage facilities continues to rise in the coming weeks, it may lead to a further widening of the bullish volatility skew in the crude oil options market, thereby increasing the underlying energy costs for global transportation and industrial production.
Drone Attrition Warfare and Valuation Logic of the Defense Sector
The disparate drone downing data released by both sides (108 vs. 1,252) indicates that low-cost, high-frequency drone swarm operations have become a core variable dominating the frontline situation. This asymmetric attrition warfare model is profoundly reshaping the procurement logic and capacity layout of the global defense industry. For capital markets, traditional heavy weapon platform manufacturers may face expectations of slowing order growth, while defense companies focusing on drone defense systems, electronic warfare jamming equipment, and mass production of low-cost suicide drones are experiencing a structural revaluation. Plans by multiple Western countries to increase defense budgets to 2% or even 3% of GDP are more inclined to favor such consumable munitions and high-tech defense networks.
Safe-Haven Capital Flows and Hedging Configurations of Sovereign Bonds
The sudden rise in geopolitical risks has inevitably triggered the safe-haven instincts of global macro funds. In the foreign exchange and fixed income markets, the collapse of ceasefire hopes has prompted the unwinding of some high-risk carry trades, with marginal capital flowing back to traditional safe-haven assets such as the US dollar and US Treasuries. Considering that the current Federal Reserve is still assessing inflation stickiness, the yield on the ten-year US Treasury may face downward pressure of several basis points driven by safe-haven buying. However, this safe-haven logic is also constrained by the rebound in energy inflation. If energy prices rise substantially due to the conflict, it will push up long-term inflation expectations, causing the sovereign bond yield curve to exhibit a more complex flattening or oscillating pattern under the dual pull of safe-haven and anti-inflation forces.