The Nasdaq breaks 24,613 points.



A new all-time high less than 30 days after what has been dubbed the "war crash" with the start of the US-Iran war.

+19% in 23 days since the March 31 low.

$6.7 trillion in market capitalization has been added to the index,
of which $3.5 trillion has been added since the war officially began.

Today, the Nasdaq is 10% higher than its level before the first shot was fired.

All this is happening while oil is above $101,
the Strait of Hormuz is half-closed,
and the IMF has lowered its global growth forecast to 3.1%.

- The lesson the public refuses to learn:
The market doesn't price in what's happening today,
but rather what it expects to happen in 6 to 12 months.

- The average investor sold at the first shot and lost twice:
Once by selling at the bottom,
and again by lacking the courage to buy in a time of fear.

Institutions did the opposite, betting on the narrative that artificial intelligence operates according to its own logic, and on the inevitability of a ceasefire.

Today, Trump extended the truce with Iran indefinitely, and the market is reaping the rewards of this gamble.

From the Gulf War of 1991 to Iraq in 2003 to Iran in 2026,

History tells the same story: Wars are short-lived noise, but the American economy is a long-term machine.

The question that should haunt you until the next crisis is: Did you buy on March 31st?

Or are you among those counting losses today and wishing you could turn back time?

$NAORIS
{future}(NAORISUSDT)
$TSLA
{future}(TSLAUSDT)
$SUI
{spot}(SUIUSDT)
NAORIS5.68%
SUI-2.76%
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