Peace be upon you,
Every time geopolitical tensions rise, the same scene repeats: collective panic, hysterical selling, and a flight to cash.
But the real investor sees it differently.
The logic is clear and strict:
During wars, governments print money in large quantities to finance spending, which inevitably leads to inflation.
With inflation, the value of cash erodes quickly, while real businesses continue to operate, produce, and make profits.
When most people say: "You should sell stocks at the threat of war",
The smart investor sees that the threat of war is financial madness and recklessness.
At the threat of war: start buying, but slowly.
When war actually breaks out: significantly increase the pace of buying.
Because real war does not affect companies that can transform and adapt, but rather affects the ability to persist.
The conclusion that many find hard to accept:
War, as much as it scares investors, wealth is not built in times of ease.
But in moments of panic when others fail to think rationally.
The market doesn't always collapse because of war.
But often new millionaires are made in it.
What do you think? 👇👇👇
Are you the type that sells in panic, or the type that buys?
Write just one word:
"Seller" or "Buyer"
