I Was Right About The War. The Market Didn’t Care

I Was Right About The War. The Market Didn’t Care.

Why Gold Fell More Than 15% After War Broke Out In The Middle East


On February 28, 2026, war broke out between the United States, Israel, and Iran.

If you had asked me what should happen next, I would have answered immediately.

  • Gold should rise.
  • Oil should rise.
  • Risk assets should fall.

The logic seemed obvious.

War creates uncertainty.

Uncertainty drives investors toward safe-haven assets.

Gold has been one of those assets for centuries.

Everything made sense.

And that was exactly the problem.


The Trade Everyone Could See

At the time the conflict began, gold was trading around 5,248 USD per ounce.

The headlines became increasingly alarming.

Military strikes.

Retaliation threats.

Potential disruption to oil supplies.

Concerns about the Strait of Hormuz.

Every article seemed to support the same conclusion:

Gold should go higher.

It felt obvious.

Perhaps too obvious.


Then Something Strange Happened

Gold fell from approximately 5,248 USD/oz at the start of the conflict to around 4,384 USD/oz within a month. The war continued. The headlines remained negative. Yet the market moved lower.

Over the following weeks, gold failed to deliver what many investors expected.

Instead of continuing higher, it began falling.

By late March, gold was trading near 4,384 USD per ounce.

A decline of more than 15% from the levels seen when the conflict began.

The war had not ended.

The uncertainty had not disappeared.

The headlines remained negative.

Yet gold kept moving lower.

How could that happen?


I Was Asking The Wrong Question

At first glance, the market appeared irrational.

War should be bullish for gold.

That statement sounds reasonable.

The problem is that markets do not price events.

Markets price expectations.

That distinction changed the way I think about investing.

Most investors ask:

What happened?

The market asks:

What happened relative to what everyone already expected?


Being Right Is Not Enough

This was one of the most uncomfortable lessons of my investing career.

You can correctly predict an event and still lose money.

You can be right about a war.

You can be right about inflation.

You can be right about economic weakness.

And still be wrong about the trade.

Why?

Because markets move on surprises.

Not on facts.

If investors have already positioned for an outcome, the event itself may have little impact.

Sometimes the biggest move happens before the news arrives.

Sometimes the news marks the end of the move.


What The Market Was Really Pricing

By the time the conflict became front-page news, investors had already spent weeks discussing the possibility of escalation.

Fear had been building.

Positioning had been building.

Expectations had been building.

When the event finally occurred, the market did not ask whether war had started.

The market asked whether the outcome was worse than expected.

The answer, at least from the market’s perspective, was no.

And that was enough.


A Lesson That Extends Beyond Gold

This principle applies far beyond geopolitical events.

It explains why stocks sometimes fall after reporting strong earnings.

It explains why markets can rally during recessions.

It explains why investors can lose money despite correctly forecasting major events.

The market is not grading your prediction.

The market is grading the difference between expectation and reality.


Final Thought

One of the biggest mistakes investors make is believing that being right about an event guarantees investment success.

It does not.

In early 2026, I looked at the war and thought the conclusion was obvious.

Gold should rise.

The market looked at the same event and asked a different question.

Hadn’t everyone already reached the same conclusion?

Gold eventually fell more than 15%.

The war taught me something important.

Being right about an event is not the same thing as being right about a trade.

Markets do not reward correct predictions.

Markets reward correct expectations.

Related Articles

Markets Are Auctions: Every Trade Has A Buyer And A Seller

Markets Are Auctions: Every Trade Has A Buyer And A Seller

Early in my investing career, I made what seemed like an obvious bet.

A geopolitical event caused oil prices to surge.

The logic appeared straightforward.

If oil prices rise, companies that benefit from higher oil prices should become more valuable.

Therefore, energy-related stocks should rise as well.

I was confident.

The market was not.

What surprised me was not that I could be wrong.

What surprised me was that even when the story looked obvious, the market did not react the way I expected.

That experience taught me an important lesson:

Markets are not news.

Markets are auctions.

And every auction requires both a buyer and a seller.

Observation

Many traders think they are trading charts.

Others think they are trading news.

In reality, every trade is an interaction between people with different beliefs about the future.

When you buy, someone else is willing to sell.

When you sell, someone else is willing to buy.

That simple fact explains much of market behavior.

If everyone agrees that an asset is attractive, the price often adjusts before the news becomes obvious.

By the time a headline reaches the public, expectations may already be reflected in prices.

This is why markets sometimes rise on bad news and fall on good news.

The market is not reacting to the news itself.

The market is reacting to the difference between expectations and reality.

A Mental Model That Changed My Thinking

Whenever I look at a chart today, I imagine thousands of participants making decisions.

Every candle represents buyers and sellers negotiating value.

Every breakout represents one side gaining control.

Every reversal represents a shift in conviction.

Instead of asking:

What will the market do next?

I try to ask:

What are market participants currently expecting?

That question is often far more useful.

From Poker To Markets

I see a similar principle in poker.

One memorable hand involved pocket nines on a board containing both an eight and a jack.

My hand was not particularly strong.

Yet I called three barrels from an opponent holding A9 and ultimately caught a bluff.

The decision was not based on certainty.

It was based on understanding the person on the other side of the table.

Markets work in much the same way.

You are never trading against a chart.

You are trading against the collective decisions of other participants.

Implication

Many investors spend years searching for better indicators.

A more useful exercise is learning how markets actually function.

Every price is the result of disagreement.

Every trade reflects competing expectations.

Every candle represents a temporary victory by buyers or sellers.

Understanding this changes the way we interpret markets.

We stop treating prices as facts.

We start treating them as evidence.

And that is often the beginning of better decision making.


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