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Most investors assume war is catastrophic for markets. Missiles launch. Headlines turn urgent. The instinct is to sell, hide in cash, and wait for the uncertainty to pass. But markets rarely work that way. War doesn't usually destroy markets. It redistributes capital inside them. In this episode, Andy Tanner, Noah Davidson, and Corey Halliday unpack how experienced investors think during geopolitical conflict. Instead of reacting to headlines, they focus on how money rotates between sectors — energy, defense, commodities, and volatility itself. You'll hear why oil often moves first, how insurance pricing in the VIX reveals market fear, and why defense and infrastructure companies quietly benefit when global tensions rise. More importantly, the conversation challenges a deeper assumption: that dramatic events require dramatic portfolio changes. In reality, many of the biggest investing mistakes happen when investors confuse noise with systemic risk. War may dominate the news cycle, but markets tend to process it quickly. The real advantage comes from staying calm, understanding sector rotation, and managing risk while others react emotionally. This episode is not about predicting conflicts or picking sides. It's about understanding how capital behaves when uncertainty rises — and how disciplined investors position themselves when the world gets loud.
Want to Learn More? – Explore free education and tools at cashflowbonus.com to strengthen your investing foundation – Keep building your financial education at yourinvestingclass.com.
By Andy Tanner4.6
216216 ratings
Most investors assume war is catastrophic for markets. Missiles launch. Headlines turn urgent. The instinct is to sell, hide in cash, and wait for the uncertainty to pass. But markets rarely work that way. War doesn't usually destroy markets. It redistributes capital inside them. In this episode, Andy Tanner, Noah Davidson, and Corey Halliday unpack how experienced investors think during geopolitical conflict. Instead of reacting to headlines, they focus on how money rotates between sectors — energy, defense, commodities, and volatility itself. You'll hear why oil often moves first, how insurance pricing in the VIX reveals market fear, and why defense and infrastructure companies quietly benefit when global tensions rise. More importantly, the conversation challenges a deeper assumption: that dramatic events require dramatic portfolio changes. In reality, many of the biggest investing mistakes happen when investors confuse noise with systemic risk. War may dominate the news cycle, but markets tend to process it quickly. The real advantage comes from staying calm, understanding sector rotation, and managing risk while others react emotionally. This episode is not about predicting conflicts or picking sides. It's about understanding how capital behaves when uncertainty rises — and how disciplined investors position themselves when the world gets loud.
Want to Learn More? – Explore free education and tools at cashflowbonus.com to strengthen your investing foundation – Keep building your financial education at yourinvestingclass.com.

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