Geopolitics in the Middle East - it seems that we are approaching the same moment when a geopolitical explosion in the region will trigger the launch mechanism:
● the stock market is falling,
● crypto is collapsing even worse,
● gold makes a vertical candle upwards,
● everyone starts looking for the 'bottom', but finds a new level of panic.
And judging by the dynamics, with every new headline we are moving towards a point where events no longer ask for our opinion.
Key advisors Donald Trump fly to Israel, meet with the Prime Minister, and discuss something.
Well, yes, of course, diplomacy. When politicians urgently fly to a region that is on fire, they are definitely not talking about peace over coffee.
And Trump himself plays his favorite role in the information field:
"I want peace, dear Iran, let's make a deal while I'm still good."
It looks so transparent that you just want to ask – "Are you serious?"
Because usually, when Trump theatrically calls for peace, the next step is rockets flying – and then he says:
"Well, I warned you."
Words of Mike Pompeo, former CIA director, appointed by Trump himself:
"Believe me, there is no chance for an agreement. This regime violates agreements on the day they are signed."
Period. No diplomatic phrases. Just a statement that negotiations with Iran are not even a dream, but a fantasy for television broadcasting.
And when such a person says that there will be no agreement – it means we are moving not towards "diplomacy", but towards a scenario that changes markets faster than any macro data. That’s why the market behaves so nervously: investors feel perfectly well that this is not just news noise. This is an increase in pressure. This is preparation for something that will explode not in telegram channels, but on real charts:
● crypto will crash,
● the fund will take the hit,
● gold will go up so much that everyone will suddenly "remember" that metal is not just a beautiful accessory, but the last refuge in case of geopolitical hysteria.
And if you look at the dynamics now – everything points to one thing: the question is not whether escalation will happen.
The question is when exactly, and how strongly it will throw out of the market those who still pretend that everything is under control.

