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FOMO hits hardest when the market starts moving faster than our ability to think. A sudden rally, a viral chart, a wave of “I told you so” posts — and suddenly even disciplined investors feel that internal jolt. It’s not just about wanting profit; it’s about avoiding the emotional sting of being the only one who didn’t act. That pressure creates a false sense of urgency, pushing people into trades they never planned to take.
What makes FOMO dangerous is how quietly it rewires priorities. Long‑term strategy gets replaced by short‑term fear, and risk starts to look smaller simply because everyone else seems comfortable taking it. The crowd becomes the signal, even when the fundamentals don’t justify the move. And once you’re in, the emotional cycle flips — now the fear is about losing, not missing out.
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