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 | Dec 07, 2023 05:18AM ET

Some say that war never changes, and in some aspects, that’s true. But markets’ reactions to war are also remarkably similar.

What I’m going to start today’s analysis with is not something you’ll read in many places. Usually, analysts are either following just the technical or just the fundamental aspects of a given market.

But the true edge comes from combining both worlds. From really understanding the basics and then applying them in ways that are not necessarily popular, but that work remarkably well, nonetheless.

So, the key rule behind the technical analysis is that the history rhymes. Similar situations price- and volume-wise trigger similar emotional responses, which in turn trigger similar reactions to news or events, regardless of what they are. As humans don’t become less emotional – in general – over time, technical analysis continues to work, and we can compare the same patterns across various times, even though the geopolitical situation in the world changes dynamically.

The next key thing that I want to emphasize is that markets react to expectations and concerns much more than they react to facts. In fact, sometimes markets can move in the opposite way to what a given news release “should” cause, just because the expectations were missed. Remember when stocks plunged in 2008 after Bernanke cut rates by 0.75%? Pointless? Maybe so, but the market expected an even bigger move.

This is exactly why fear or concern about a major military conflict is something that is much more likely to cause the markets to move than the conflict itself.

The below chart from Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Trends shows just how significantly the concern with “war” increased and then. It faded away, even though the wars themselves haven’t.