Felix & Friends (Goat Academy), a YouTube channel with 552K subscribers, dropped a simple idea that most people miss during conflicts like this one. Markets panicFelix & Friends (Goat Academy), a YouTube channel with 552K subscribers, dropped a simple idea that most people miss during conflicts like this one. Markets panic

Here’s How The US Iran Conflict Will Make (Smart) Investors Rich

2026/03/02 04:00
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Felix & Friends (Goat Academy), a YouTube channel with 552K subscribers, dropped a simple idea that most people miss during conflicts like this one. Markets panic first. Then they adjust. The big mistake is reacting to the first wave of fear, either by dumping everything or chasing the obvious “war winners” after they already ran.

The point isn’t predicting where the next strike lands. The point is watching where money goes when uncertainty hits, and how that flow changes once the shock wears off.

That pattern has shown up again and again, from the Gulf War to Iraq to Russia–Ukraine. The details change. The money flow rhythm stays similar.

Phase One: Shock Moves Fast

The first phase is messy. Headlines hit, algorithms react, and prices jump around. Oil and defense usually spike early because that’s the immediate story the market grabs. The broad market often drops at the same time because uncertainty is poison for risk assets.

This is where most retail decisions go wrong. Fear pushes people into cash at the worst moment, locking in losses and letting inflation do the rest. Or money chases what already spiked, buying the top of the “war trade” because it feels safe in the moment.

The key feature of this phase is speed. It feels urgent. That’s why it traps people.

Read Also: ChatGPT Predicts the Price of Silver and Gold If the U.S.–Iran War Escalates Further

Phase Two: The Repricing Phase

After the first wave, the market stops screaming and starts thinking. This is where the real questions show up. What happens to oil supply risk? What happens to inflation? What happens to rates? What gets more expensive to ship, produce, or finance?

In Felix’s framework, this is where larger players start shifting exposure with more intention. Not a dramatic all-in bet. More like a slow rotation into areas that benefit if the new conditions last longer than a few days.

This phase is less exciting, which is exactly why it matters. The easy headlines fade, and positioning becomes the main driver.

Read Also: Here’s How High Hedera (HBAR) Price Could Go This Week?

Phase Three: The Rotation That Pays

The last phase is where money settles into the “second-order” winners. Not just the obvious names that spiked on day one, but the businesses that keep benefiting if the situation drags on.

Higher oil risk can support energy-linked cash flows, but the bigger theme is what higher energy costs do to everything else. If inflation stays sticky, rate cuts get delayed. If rates stay higher, certain parts of the market get hit harder than others. That’s when the gap between sectors gets wider.

This is also where gold and hard assets can keep holding up, even after the first panic move. Oil can spike and then cool off. Gold often stays supported when uncertainty and inflation risk hang around.

Felix’s core point is simple: the goal isn’t “profiting from war.” It’s avoiding the classic mistakes that wipe people out during war headlines, and positioning like markets are what they are, cold, mechanical, and forward-looking.

What This Means in Plain English

When conflict risk rises, markets don’t reward emotional moves. They reward preparation and patience. The first few days are usually the worst time to make big portfolio decisions. The better window often comes after the initial chaos, when the market has already absorbed the shock and starts pricing the knock-on effects.

The clean takeaway from Felix’s framework is that conflict creates three things: a fear spike, a reality check, and then a rotation. The people who get paid are usually the ones who treat it as a process, not a headline.

Read Also: ChatGPT Predicts the Price of Cardano and Polkadot If the CLARITY Act Passes

The Big Mistake to Avoid

The trap is thinking safety equals “do something drastic.” Selling everything to cash can feel like control, but it often turns into a slow loss once markets rebound. Chasing the hottest war trade after it already ran can feel like protection, but it often turns into buying high and selling lower.

The calmer move is incremental positioning with a clear plan. No drama. No hero trades. Just exposure where money tends to flow when the world gets uncertain, plus a focus on risk control.

However, Felix & Friends framed it well: markets panic first, then they adapt. The first phase scares people. The later phases pay people.

If this conflict escalates, the biggest gains usually don’t come from guessing headlines. They come from understanding how money moves when fear hits, what inflation and rates do next, and which sectors quietly collect the benefits after the crowd moves on.

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The post Here’s How The US Iran Conflict Will Make (Smart) Investors Rich appeared first on CaptainAltcoin.

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