
After four straight weeks of losses, I keep hearing the same question: "When does this end?"
The honest answer: nobody knows. And that's exactly the problem.
The pattern nobody's talking about:
Markets can handle bad news. When a company reports poor earnings, investors find a new price and move on. Even in recessions, there's usually a historical map to follow.
But right now? We have too many "what ifs" landing at once:
– Will the Strait of Hormuz reopen next week or stay shut for months?
– Will oil stabilize at $112 or climb to $150?
– Will the Fed cut rates by September or hold all year?
Nobody knows—and that's what's keeping markets under pressure.
Why uncertainty is more expensive than bad news:
When the future is a total guess, investors can't put a fair price on anything. So instead of trying to guess correctly, they just stop playing. They move to cash and wait.
This isn't panic—it's caution. But when everyone's cautious at once, markets drift lower not because of what's happening, but because of what *might* happen.
What this means going forward:
Markets don't need things to get better—they just need to get clearer. One or two of these big questions need answers before investors feel comfortable taking risks again.
Until then, expect more sideways, choppy action. The market isn't broken. The windshield is just covered in fog.
Three things I'm watching this week:
– Any movement on Strait of Hormuz reopening (instant oil price reaction)
– Jobs data (first sign if businesses are pulling back on hiring)
– FII Priority Miami Summit (Saudi investment forum—could signal regional policy shifts)
I write a deeper breakdown of this every Monday in my newsletter if you want the full analysis:
What's your take—are you waiting for clarity or buying the dip?
Markets aren't falling because things are bad—they're falling because nobody knows what happens next
byu/Anxious_Distance_288 ineconomy
Posted by Anxious_Distance_288
4 Comments
There’s no way I’m buying this dip, later in the recession seems more likely.
I think the Fed chair was pretty clear..buckle up
Markets might not be falling because things are bad, but to be clear, things are bad.
When there’s fog on the windshield, buy Berkshire Hathaway and sell more speculative positions. Works like a charm