Goldman Sachs: Investor risk appetite has returned to pre-Iran war levels
According to Jinshi reports, Goldman Sachs analysts pointed out that investors' risk appetite has rebounded to pre-Iran war levels. With bets that the worst-case scenario of a U.S.-Iran war will not occur, stock market volatility has significantly decreased. Retail investors in the U.S. have re-entered the stock market, and automated trading has also driven the stock market up. In the four weeks ending last Wednesday, investors withdrew nearly $125 billion from safe-haven money market funds, marking one of the largest outflows on record.
You may also like
Semiconductor stocks plummet, yet Anthropic wants to create a 2nm chip
Where is Zhao Changpeng's billion-dollar investment going? YZi Labs' investment landscape fully revealed
Ethereum Foundation Report: A Basic Guide to Ethereum for Governments and Financial Institutions
A pre-announced harvesting case: After the cryptocurrency price dropped by 99%, the public chain Saga exited to transform into AI
When American giants collectively "defect" from Chinese AI models
BIS Report Compliance Observation: The Real Risks of Stablecoins, Not Just "Depegging"
Portugal 2-1 Croatia: Ronaldo's 20-Year Knockout-Stage Drought Ends With a Debt Finally Collected
Portugal beat Croatia 2-1 in the 2026 global football championship's knockout rounds as Ronaldo scored his first-ever knockout-stage goal, Gonçalo Ramos struck a stoppage-time winner, and VAR ruled out a late equalizer for offside.
