When headlines break that Israel attacked Iran, the first thing markets do is panic.

Bitcoin dumps. Longs get wiped. Everyone rushes to safety.

But if you’ve watched markets long enough, you notice a pattern:

Fear-driven news often marks the zone where selling exhausts.

It’s not because war is “good.”

It’s because uncertainty forces weak hands out fast. Once that flush is done, price slows down, emotions cool, and real buyers start stepping in quietly.

That’s how ranges are born.

Not straight pumps. Not instant reversals.

Just a battle between fear and patience.

This isn’t a time for emotion.

It’s a time to observe structure, respect volatility, and range-play smart while the market digests the shock.

Calm always comes after chaos.

#USIsraelStrikeIran