UTED
POTATO
APRIL
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SURGE
While investors were watching bitcoin, Nasdaq and oil, a completely unlikely asset posted the best performance of the month. In April, derivatives related to potatoes soared by 705 %, benefiting from market nervousness amid geopolitical tensions around Iran. This spectacular rise reveals a global phenomenon: in a climate dominated by global uncertainty, speculative capital is now moving far beyond crypto and technology.
While eyes remained fixed on bitcoin and oil, CFD contracts linked to potatoes recorded the highest increase of the month. Indeed, the CFDs backed by potatoes jumped 705% in less than a month.
The movement reportedly started after April 21, a period during which European prices went from about 2.11 euros to 18.50 euros per 100 kg. This spectacular surge occurred in a context dominated by tensions between Washington and Tehran, as well as concerns surrounding the Strait of Hormuz.
The main points highlighted are the following :
This increase does not result from an immediate shortage. Such a surge mainly reflects the financial markets’ reaction to volatility related to the conflict with Iran, and not a real physical shortage. Markets likely reacted to the prospect of logistical and inflationary disruptions rather than an actual lack of agricultural production.
At the same time, oil continued its rise. Meanwhile, bitcoin regained the $80,000 threshold. Together, this illustrates an extreme tension climate where every geopolitical risk becomes a speculative catalyst.
Beyond the simple surprise effect, this sequence also reveals a temporary shift of speculative flows. Even though the crypto market remains dominated by anticipation around bitcoin and ETFs, some traders seem to seek assets capable of offering much more significant short-term fluctuations. Agricultural and energy commodities then become privileged grounds for opportunistic strategies fueled by geopolitical volatility.
This dynamic contrasts with the dominant narrative of recent months around cryptos. Bitcoin maintains a central position in risk markets, but it no longer monopolizes extreme performances. Investors now seem to favor sectors directly exposed to international shocks, especially when military tensions threaten global supply chains or transportation costs. Even oil stocks benefit from this speculative rotation, as oil values trade with a $40 premium.
This situation could mark a global evolution of financial markets in the coming months. Assets able to react instantly to geopolitical crises now attract part of the capital that previously fed exclusively crypto. For investors, this episode mainly reminds that in times of global uncertainty, the most violent movements sometimes emerge where no one is watching.