Crude at $100, AI IPOs at $1 trillion, and gold on sale: What Peter McGuire says you should do now
Peter McGuire of Australia-Trading.com highlights a chaotic market driven by rumors and geopolitics, not fundamentals. He predicts crude oil prices will rise, advises caution on trillion-dollar AI IPOs, and remains bullish on India for the long te...

Peter McGuire, CEO of Australia-Trading.com, sat down with ET Now to decode what is arguably the most unpredictable market environment in recent memory, and his answers were blunt.
Crude is volatile, but likely heading higher
Brent crude came within touching distance of $100 a barrel before pulling back. McGuire says the retreat means little. "Nothing surprises me at all," he said. "You can see 5% and 6% moves in a day. It is not uncommon," says McGuire.The volatility is being driven by a confluence of factors — the ongoing Iran-Israel conflict, uncertainty around the Strait of Hormuz, tentative moves from Yemen, and depleting global stockpiles.
Crucially, McGuire points out that the market is currently "leading on noise" rather than fundamentals, meaning every geopolitical headline moves the price, regardless of the underlying supply-
demand picture.
$3-trillion IPOs are about to fight for your capital
OpenAI, Anthropic, and SpaceX are all heading toward public markets, each valued close to or above $1 trillion. McGuire describes this as an unprecedented fight for global capital."There is only so much capital that can be deployed," he said. "You have got to possibly look at selling down other stocks," he says.
For investors in India, Southeast Asia, and Australia, the implication is direct: liquidity will get pulled toward US markets. Emerging market equities, including Indian mid-caps, could face near-term pressure as global funds rotate to capture the AI listing frenzy.
India: Slow to attract flows right now, But the story is intact
India will not be the immediate beneficiary of the current capital rotation, McGuire concedes. The Middle East situation and energy price pressure need to stabilise first.Gold is down 20%. McGuire says buy the dip
Gold has lost momentum as smart money chased energy and equities. But McGuire sees the pullback as an accumulation opportunity, not a structural breakdown."The hot air has been drained out of it," he said, adding that gold and silver are set for another run by Q4. With a US 10-year yield at 4.57%, bonds are competing for safe-haven flows — but that competition will not last forever.
The bottom line: Markets are being driven by geopolitics, not fundamentals. For investors, McGuire's playbook is clear — watch crude closely, be cautious chasing AI IPOs at trillion-dollar valuations, stay long on India for the decade, and start accumulating gold before Q4
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