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Trump angrily criticizes Netanyahu! Oil prices fluctuate wildly, what is the market really afraid of?
The most dramatic scene in the financial markets last night was not on Wall Street, but in the Middle East.
Trump publicly rebuked Netanyahu to promote US-Iran talks, instantly tightening global financial nerves.
Oil prices soared first.
During trading, the increase once exceeded 7%.
Then it quickly retreated.
Many investors looked at the candlestick chart and sighed:
This is no longer a roller coaster; it's bungee jumping.
Why is the market reacting so intensely?
Because oil has never just been a commodity.
It’s more like a thermometer for the global economy.
Once the Middle East situation escalates, supply concerns immediately heat up.
And as soon as there’s hope for peace talks, the market begins trading on peace expectations.
Thus, funds jump back and forth between panic and optimism.
For investors, what truly matters is not the news itself, but how the market prices risk.
Because often, the rise and fall do not depend on the event itself, but on whether the event exceeds expectations.
Currently, it’s clear that the market has not yet formed a unified judgment.
This means volatility may not be over yet.
The question is, if oil prices surge again to high levels, who do you think will benefit the most? #英伟达大涨6%创历史新高