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By Ventura Analysts Desk 3 min Read
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Every few months, something explodes. A conflict escalates, sanctions get announced, oil spikes, and the Sensex drops 1,000 points in a session. Panic runs hot for a week. Then, quietly, markets recover. Sometimes faster than anyone expected.

So the real question is not whether geopolitical events move markets. They clearly do. The question is whether markets are too quick to move on.

The ‘wall of worry’ logic

There is a popular idea in finance that markets "climb a wall of worry." The argument is that ongoing risks are already priced in. Investors have adjusted their portfolios, hedged their bets, and assumed some baseline level of global instability.

There is truth in this. Indian equity markets have digested:

  • The Russia-Ukraine war and its commodity shock
  • US-China trade tensions and supply chain restructuring
  • Red Sea shipping disruptions in 2024
  • Periodic flare-ups along the India-Pakistan border

Each time, markets corrected and then found their footing. If you had sold every time geopolitical news turned bad, you would have missed significant rallies.

But this pattern creates a trap.

When pricing in risk becomes ignoring it

The danger is not that markets recover. It is that recovery becomes automatic. Each bounce trains investors to treat the next crisis as a buying opportunity before they have actually assessed it.

Consider how Indian markets reacted to the Pahalgam terror attack in April 2025. The initial shock was real. But within sessions, the recovery narrative took over. Analysts pointed to strong domestic flows, FII buying, and "resilience." The geopolitical risk was real. The dismissal was fast.

This is worth pausing on. Markets can be right that a specific event will not derail long-term earnings. But the speed of the shrug matters. A reflexive recovery is not the same as a considered one.

What gets missed in the rush to recover

When markets move past geopolitical risk too quickly, a few things tend to get underpriced:

  1. Second-order effects. The direct impact of a conflict is often visible. The indirect effects are not. Trade route disruptions, insurance premium spikes, and supply chain rerouting take months to show up in corporate earnings.
  2. Tail risks. Markets are good at pricing central scenarios. They are not as good at pricing the scenario where something escalates beyond what anyone expected. When tensions between two nuclear-armed neighbours rise, the range of outcomes is not normal. A small probability of a very bad outcome deserves more weight than it typically gets.
  3. Shorter investor memory. Retail participation in Indian markets has grown sharply post-COVID. Many newer investors have only seen a market that recovered from every shock. That experience is real. It is also a short sample size.

The overlapping risks are harder to track

Geopolitical risk in 2025 is not one event. It is overlapping. The Middle East remains volatile. The South China Sea is a persistent flashpoint. US-China decoupling continues to reshape where Indian companies source components and where they export.

Indian companies with global supply chains, export-heavy revenues, or dollar-denominated debt face compounding exposures. The macro assumptions baked into current valuations may not fully account for a world where multiple stresses activate at the same time.

What this means for Indian investors

This is not an argument to stay in cash or treat every headline as a sell signal. That approach has historically destroyed more wealth than it protected.

But there is a difference between disciplined long-term investing and reflexive optimism. A few things worth watching:

  1. Sector exposure matters. Defence, pharma, and domestic consumption tend to be more insulated. Companies with high import dependence or export concentration face real risk when geopolitics shifts.
  2. Diversification is not just about returns. It is also about not being fully correlated to one region's political volatility.
  3. Watch corporate guidance closely. Management commentary on supply chains and raw material sourcing often signals geopolitical impact before quarterly numbers do.

Conclusion

Indian markets have shown genuine resilience. The domestic growth story, rising retail participation, and government capital expenditure give the market real support.

But resilience can become complacency. The geopolitical environment today is more complex than it was five years ago. Markets that shrug too quickly risk being caught off guard when the next shock is not as contained as the last one.

Proceeding with caution is not pessimism. It is just not confusing a pattern of recovery with a guarantee of one.

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