Why Does the Stock Market Keep Brushing Off Political Turmoil?
It's a curious paradox we're witnessing. Political uncertainty is swirling, headlines are intense, yet equity markets keep climbing without much hesitation. You'd think institutional investors would be more jittery, but they're not selling off the way historical patterns might suggest.
There are a few things at play here. First, markets tend to separate near-term political noise from long-term structural trends. Second, strong corporate earnings and tech-driven growth narratives are providing concrete reasons to stay invested. Third, there's a broad belief among traders that no matter who's steering the ship, the underlying economic machinery keeps running.
For crypto and digital asset investors, this carries an important lesson: macro volatility and political friction don't always translate into immediate market crashes. Resilience can stem from genuine fundamentals, not just sentiment. The question isn't whether chaos matters—it's whether participants have already priced it in. Right now, it looks like they have.
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notSatoshi1971
· 6h ago
Basically, institutions are banding together to buy tech stocks. No matter how chaotic politics get, it can't stop the hype around AI, and funds will flow there.
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GasFeePhobia
· 6h ago
Honestly, this is just institutions playing psychological games. The political chaos is causing the market to surge upward. LOL
Funds have already absorbed the risk, now we're just waiting to see who will step in to take over.
But to be fair, this logic doesn't necessarily apply to the crypto market, after all, ours is more volatile.
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LightningLady
· 6h ago
Honestly, the institutions have already factored in these political dramas long ago. It's only strange that it’s still falling now.
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blockBoy
· 6h ago
Honestly, this situation is truly outrageous. Politics are a mess, the stock market is still soaring, and institutions are pretending not to see it? I suspect they realized it a long time ago; now it's all just a price war.
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LongTermDreamer
· 6h ago
Ha, this is exactly what I've been saying all along. The three-year cycle theory perfectly explains it here. Political dramas are just dramas; fundamentals are the real key, and they've already been priced in.
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Basically, institutions have already digested this issue long ago, while retail investors are still debating.
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Looking at this logic, isn't it just "as long as fundamentals remain, political upheavals are just虚" (虚 means虚假 or虚幻, implying they are虚假的 or虚幻的)? The crypto world is the same way—crash, but always reaching new heights.
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They really dare to rise... Whether this is truly priced in or if another big shakeout is coming, we'll see within three years.
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I just want to ask, is this "resilience" genuine, or are everyone just betting that others won't run first, 🤔?
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Interesting. The stock market is so calm, but crypto still occasionally has violent movements. The fundamentals are just as solid.
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So let's just pretend we didn't see anything and keep hodling. Anyway, it's called "price reflected" in a nice way, or in a less nice way, just blowing balloons.
Why Does the Stock Market Keep Brushing Off Political Turmoil?
It's a curious paradox we're witnessing. Political uncertainty is swirling, headlines are intense, yet equity markets keep climbing without much hesitation. You'd think institutional investors would be more jittery, but they're not selling off the way historical patterns might suggest.
There are a few things at play here. First, markets tend to separate near-term political noise from long-term structural trends. Second, strong corporate earnings and tech-driven growth narratives are providing concrete reasons to stay invested. Third, there's a broad belief among traders that no matter who's steering the ship, the underlying economic machinery keeps running.
For crypto and digital asset investors, this carries an important lesson: macro volatility and political friction don't always translate into immediate market crashes. Resilience can stem from genuine fundamentals, not just sentiment. The question isn't whether chaos matters—it's whether participants have already priced it in. Right now, it looks like they have.