ð° Delving into the Economic Line: How the Venetian Crisis 2026 Hits Our Money
The U.S. invasion of Maduro, and the $5,000-an-ounce gold price, is no longer far off.
1.Gold price: New High at $5,000 + (and may go on!) ðŠ
Gold hit a record in decades.
Why is it? Investors fear the uncertainty of U.S. intervention in Venezuela and Trump's policy concerns.
How to hit us? Whoever saves in gold, congratulations! Your portfolio value is definitely rising, but for anyone who thinks to buy more, be careful of "profit force" (Correction).
2. Oil price: short-term fluctuation, but there is a long-term downward trend. â―
Short-term: The "set the card" market causes oil prices to swing strongly (volatility) from political risk.
Long-term: If the United States successfully manages the oil fields in Venei (which has the largest reserves in the world), the oil supply will be oversupplied and the world oil price will be "cheaper" over the next one to two years, which is good news for the cost of living in Thailand.
3. Baht value: fluctuates by U.S. dollar ðĩ
The dollar will appreciate as a safe haven, weakening the baht.
Who has plans to travel abroad lately or order pre-orders? The cost may be a little higher.
4. Inflation and expensive ð
The Economic Agency (NEC and MPC) has an eye on how the crisis could send a ripple force on global freight costs.
If the conflict escalates - > expensive transportation costs - > things in the mall, prices go up.
But if the situation ends quickly and Venei oil flows into the market - > Thai inflation may be lower.
ðĄ How to cope for "common people."
Delay price chasing: For gold, it is not recommended to "buy" at the top of the doi. DCA should be accumulated or wait for a short stroke.
Cash reserves: In volatile global conditions, having high liquidity cash on your own is the safest option.
Follow Energy News: Because the price of oil is the main cost of our food and travel expenses.
































































































