For information only. Not financial advice. The post in your screenshot highlights an important investing idea. When a geopolitical shock hits global energy markets, the key question is not only whether conflict begins. The real question is how long the disruption lasts and how serious the damage becomes. In a US-Iran war scenario, investors would... Continue Reading →
Global Conflict Trade: 10 Stocks Most Exposed to Iran War Headlines
10 Stocks Most Likely to Be Impacted by the Iran War (Winners, Losers, and “Watch List”) As of March 2026. For education only, not financial advice. When a major conflict involves Iran, markets usually react through the same handful of “pipes”: oil and gas supply risk, shipping disruption, insurance costs, defense procurement, and inflation/interest-rate expectations.... Continue Reading →
S&P 500 Shake-Up: Why Vertiv, Lumentum, Coherent and EchoStar Stocks Are in Focus Now
As-of date: Mar 2026. For education only, not financial advice. Four New Names Join the S&P 500 on March 23: VRT, LITE, COHR, SATS — What It Means and What Usually Happens Next S&P 500 changes look simple: a few tickers go in, a few tickers go out. But because the S&P 500 is the... Continue Reading →
Stock Market Performance After U.S. Midterm Elections: What History Tells Investors
As-of date: 3 Mar 2026. Educational market commentary only — not financial advice. How the U.S. Stock Market Performs After Midterm Elections Every four years, the United States holds congressional midterm elections halfway through a presidential term. Midterms can influence fiscal policy, taxation priorities, regulation, and government spending—so it’s natural for investors to ask: Does... Continue Reading →
Could Oil Really Hit $150 a Barrel? Understanding the War Risk Scenario in Global Energy Markets
As-of date: 6 Mar 2026. Educational market commentary only — not financial advice. Can Oil Really Hit US$150 a Barrel? Why It Is Possible, but Not the Base Case The idea of oil reaching US$150 a barrel sounds extreme, but it is not impossible. In fact, Qatar’s energy minister recently warned that prices could climb... Continue Reading →
Why Gold Performs Well During War and How to Hold Physical Gold Today
Whenever a major war breaks out or geopolitical tensions rise sharply, financial markets tend to react quickly. Stock markets become volatile, currencies may weaken, energy prices often surge, and investors begin searching for safer places to store wealth. In these moments, gold frequently returns to the spotlight. For thousands of years, gold has served as... Continue Reading →
Trump’s 15% Tariff Shock: How It Could Hit U.S. Stocks, Gold, and Asian Markets
Markets are again being forced to price in a tougher U.S. trade stance. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the United States was likely to raise the temporary global tariff rate to 15%, after the Trump administration had already shifted to a temporary 10% global tariff for 150 days following the Supreme Court’s decision against... Continue Reading →
Korea’s 2-Day Stock Crash: What Triggered It — and Why the U.S. Market May Not Follow
As of date: Mar 5, 2026. Disclaimer: For education only. Not financial advice. Korea’s Stock Market Dropped About 18% in 2 Days. Will the U.S. Be Next? South Korea’s stock market just delivered a shock. The benchmark KOSPI fell about 18% across two sessions. When a major market drops that fast, you naturally ask a... Continue Reading →
White House Meets Defense Contractors as U.S. Munitions Stockpiles Shrink: Winners, Risks, and What to Watch
As-of date: Mar 4, 2026 (Asia/Singapore). Disclaimer: This post is for information and education only, not financial advice. White House Meets Defense Contractors as Munitions Run Low: What Happened, Why It Matters, and Who Benefits On Mar 3, 2026, Reuters reported that the White House plans to meet executives from major U.S. defense contractors on... Continue Reading →
Asia Markets Slide as Oil Shock Fears Hit Hang Seng, Kospi, and Nikkei
As-of date: Mar 3, 2026 (Asia/Singapore). Disclaimer: This is market commentary for education only. It is not financial advice. Asia Markets Fell Hard. Oil Fear Drove the Mood. On March 4, 2026, Asian stocks sold off as investors started treating the Middle East conflict as a longer, higher-risk event instead of a quick headline shock.... Continue Reading →