
Writing by: Bitget Wallet
War reveals ruins to the world, but capital only cares about prices.
As the Middle East reignites with conflict, colleagues in Dubai send reports of bombings and air raid sirens. Missiles tear through the sky, symbolizing humanity’s wait for an uncertain fate.
Meanwhile, on an invisible timeline, global financial markets have begun recalculating: Where should oil prices go? Will gold continue to surge? When will the stock market bottom out and rebound?
Capital shows no sympathy, nor does it anger. It simply does one thing—price uncertainty. To most people, it’s invisible, intangible, coldly logical, and ruthlessly paced.
But in turbulent times, understanding the logic of capital operations and risk pricing might be the last line of defense between ordinary people and the tide of history. Looking back at human geopolitical conflicts and financial history, you’ll find an almost unchanging rule: In the face of war, capital markets always repeat the same script. Over the past 36 years, this script has been played out four times in full.
From the Gulf War in 1991, the Iraq War in 2003, to the Russia-Ukraine conflict in 2022, the script is always eerily similar. These three major geopolitical crises illustrate the pricing pattern of capital markets during the “incubation—eruption—clarification” phases.
Financial markets are essentially a discounting machine for expectations. During the incubation period of conflict, fears of supply disruptions push oil and gold prices to sky-high levels, while global stocks plummet sharply. However, Wall Street has a brutal rule: “Buy to the sound of cannons.”
Once the first shot is fired (or the situation clarifies), the greatest uncertainty is cleared. Safe-haven assets often peak and then fall back quickly, while stocks perform a deep V-shaped reversal at despair’s nadir. The war may still be ongoing, but the panic in capital markets has subsided.
Here is an in-depth analysis of how capital markets changed during these three historical events:

This war is a textbook case in modern financial history for studying geopolitical shocks, perfectly illustrating “buy expectations, sell facts.”
The 2003 Iraq War, combined with the aftershocks of the dot-com bubble burst and post-9/11 security fears, reflected a market response more like “short-term relief from long-term pain.”
Unlike the Middle East wars (where the U.S. quickly achieved overwhelming victory without long-term damage to global supply chains), the Russia-Ukraine conflict has had a deeper, more lasting impact, fundamentally changing macroeconomic logic.
Let’s bring the timeline back to reality.
The current escalation in the Middle East again pushes global capital markets into a period of “stress testing” filled with uncertainty.
From a macroeconomic perspective, the core threat of the Middle East conflict to capital markets is: “Physical supply chain disruption → Energy prices soar → Global inflation rebounds → Central banks forced to tighten → Risk assets plummet.”
Chain reaction: The Middle East controls the global oil lifeline (especially key waterways like the Strait of Hormuz). If conflict escalates or risks involving major oil producers, markets will immediately price in “geopolitical risk premiums.” This causes Brent and WTI crude to spike sharply in the short term.
Deeper impact: Oil is the mother of all industries. Rising oil prices not only increase costs for airlines, logistics, and chemicals but also threaten the recently stabilized consumer price index (CPI) through “imported inflation.”
Chain reaction: During war, geopolitical turmoil, and potential hyperinflation, funds instinctively flock to gold. Gold prices often gap higher before and during the early stages of conflict, reaching new highs; silver, with industrial uses, tends to be more volatile.
Deeper impact: Be aware that gold’s surge is often emotion-driven. Once the situation clarifies (even if conflict continues), safe-haven sentiment wanes, and gold prices tend to retreat, returning to the pricing logic dominated by the U.S. dollar’s real interest rates.
Chain reaction: War generally is bearish for U.S. stocks. The VIX (volatility index) spikes rapidly, and funds withdraw from high-valuation tech stocks (like AI and semiconductors), shifting into defense, traditional energy, and utilities.
Deeper impact: What U.S. stocks fear most isn’t the artillery fire itself but the inflationary rebound it triggers. If oil prices surge and keep CPI high, the Fed may delay or reverse rate cuts. This macro tightening hits tech stocks’ valuations hard, especially those represented by the Nasdaq.
Chain reaction: Despite Bitcoin’s narrative as “digital gold,” during past geopolitical crises (like initial Russia-Ukraine escalation or Middle East tensions), crypto markets behaved more like “highly elastic Nasdaq.”
Deeper impact: In war panic, Wall Street institutions tend to sell the most liquid, riskiest assets first—crypto included—leading to declines. Altcoins face liquidity shortages. However, if conflicts cause local fiat currencies to collapse or traditional banking systems to be obstructed, crypto’s “censorship resistance and borderless transfer” attributes may attract some safe-haven capital.
From historical geopolitical conflicts, we can distill core rules for ordinary people to respond:
History doesn’t simply repeat, but it always rhymes. When observing current capital movements, we must calmly judge: Is this conflict a temporary emotional panic, or a black swan that will reshape global inflation and interest rate cycles?
Geopolitical games are unpredictable; a late-night ceasefire can instantly wipe out highly leveraged long positions. In crises, the primary rule is always to preserve capital.
Under the shadow of war and inflation, the core goal for ordinary investors must shift from “pursuing high returns” to “protecting principal, defending against inflation, and hedging tail risks.” Consider restructuring your assets with these “defensive counterattack” tactics:

Strategy 1: Build a high cash buffer (20%-30%)
Strategy 2: Buy “insurance” against inflation (10%-15%)
Strategy 3: Narrow your focus, hold core equities (30%-40%)
Strategy 4: De-risk crypto (for Web3 users)
Absolute red lines:
In macro shocks, the strongest weapon for ordinary people isn’t precise prediction but common sense, patience, and a healthy balance sheet.
War will end, and order will be restored from ruins.
In moments of extreme panic, the most un-human action is to stay rational; the most dangerous is panic selling. Remember the oldest adage in investing: never bet on the end of the world—because even if you win, no one will pay you.
Our greatest hope remains: conflict ends, families reunite, and peace returns to the world.