Global investors are now holding their breath in anticipation of the market open.



This event's impact on the market is actually quite complex, not simply positive or negative. More accurately, it is a classic case of time mismatch—the short-term and long-term effects are completely opposite.

Let's start with the short term. Geopolitical tensions suddenly escalate, triggering an instinctive flight to safety, and funds will initially withdraw. This is a normal reaction.

But what about the medium to long term? Once oil flows into the international market from that region, the oil price center will tend to decline, easing inflation pressures, and risk assets may benefit. The problem is, no one can predict how long the gap will be between these two phases.

Many people focus first on oil prices, but actually, what’s truly alarming isn’t oil itself, but the "method" used. The U.S. directly arresting a sitting president is an action scale last seen during the Panama incident in 1989. This sends a signal worldwide: the boundaries of traditional intervention are becoming blurred. Who’s next? This will directly increase the global risk premium, and the market’s first reaction will definitely be risk aversion.

Here's another detail. The oil fields over there are severely aging, and the infrastructure is basically obsolete. To truly increase production, it would take at least a year or two. So, oil prices won’t immediately plummet.

As for the dollar, it might be temporarily favored in the short term, but in the long run, its "moral authority" and institutional premium are being eroded. It’s increasingly seen as the "least bad option" rather than the "most trustworthy choice."

Overall, this is an event that reacts in phases. When the market opens, gold might rise first, and oil prices will fluctuate initially. After the first wave of sentiment subsides and funds start to do the math, the true direction will be confirmed.
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RealYieldWizardvip
· 6h ago
The time mismatch framework is interesting, but I think the market reaction will be much faster than the analysis. The real test will be in the next few days.
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BlockchainArchaeologistvip
· 21h ago
Oil prices are chaotic, but the key is that the dollar's credibility is declining. In the short term, safe-haven gold is soaring; in the long term, it remains promising.
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CryptoCrazyGFvip
· 21h ago
Gold will definitely surge first, but I bet the US dollar won't withstand this wave. Once moral authority collapses, there's no turning back.
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GateUser-a180694bvip
· 21h ago
The term "timing mismatch" is used perfectly. Short-term runs, then possibly reversing in the medium to long term... that's the most difficult to operate. Who knows how long that "middle" will have to wait? The US dollar is really a bit awkward right now. From being a symbol of faith to just "making do," this process is the most critical.
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StablecoinAnxietyvip
· 21h ago
Oil prices are volatile, so gold will lead first. We need to wait for the first wave of sentiment to pass before we can see the direction clearly.
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DAOdreamervip
· 21h ago
The perspective of time mismatch is quite interesting—short-term hedging and long-term benefits... etc. Is the "moral authority" of the dollar being depleted? That statement hit hard; it feels like the entire system is being reconstructed.
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TopBuyerBottomSellervip
· 21h ago
You say gold will go up first, but I think this opening might actually cut through a wave of anxiety first... The real bomb is the declining trust in the US dollar. This time it's not just simple good news or bad news; the timing mismatch is indeed tricky. Short-term risk avoidance versus long-term is another matter, and who can say how long the gap will be... Their infrastructure is so bad over there, trying to speed things up won't make it faster. Wait, have you thought about this? This incident is causing the "moral premium" of the dollar to drop. Where will the safe-haven funds flow to in the end? Is Bitcoin about to turn around?
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BlockchainArchaeologistvip
· 22h ago
Honestly, this wave of short-term safe-haven gold taking off, but in the long run, it depends on how oil prices loosen up. The most difficult period is really this middle ground where no one can predict where the next crash point will be. The statement that the dollar is the "least bad option" is spot on. Once the moral authority is exhausted, only the systemic premium remains to support it. Sooner or later, we have to consider alternative options. The detail about the decommissioning of oilfield infrastructure is very important. Many people are still hoping for oil prices to drop instantly, but if it doesn't happen, it could take a year or two. What’s more frightening on that side isn’t the oil itself, but the scale of this move. It directly changes the definition of intervention boundaries. How can the market not panic? The first wave of opening gold trading will definitely surge, initially fleeing to safe assets. Only after this side's sentiment stabilizes and funds start to truly reckon will the real turning point come. That will be the watershed moment.
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