You have to take the long term view or it doesn't work.
When/how you get IN is really important, Dollar cost averaging as it's called:
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/d/dollarcostaveraging.asp
is the tradiditional advice, but is rather short-sighted.
We can say now that there's a HIGH probablility that If you buy oil now, it'll dip quite a lot at some point having gone higher. How are you going to find the peak to sell at?
If you're twitchy as hell, you can IME usually get out early
enough. If the price drops instantly you're stuffed though.
I was heavily into Korea because of a small number of AI assets there. Then Trump got his willy out and Korea's oil comes from the gulf.
A fund at a fund-holder, such as I was using (Barings Korea) takea a day or so to deal.
Fortunately though, Korea had a national holiday on the critical day, so I guessed the exchange (KOSPI) wouldn' be able to react a lot, so I sold ~2/3rds, at the yellow arrow.
It dropped like a rock the following day. The drop on the red arrow (actually a bit below ehere marked) lost me about £50k. Ouch. I would have been better off holding, as is often the case, but I sold because I didn't know how much further it was going to go. So any avoidable loss, you can look on as insurance. It could have gone down to 0%. The loss was only what I'd made on that amount of stake, in the last month.
I've rebought at about the green line. I also have some oil. If oil supply is restored, I may lose on the oil but win on Korea. If Korea uses Russian or other oil, those high tech companies in Korea can carry on up. So we'll see.
Craig Revell Horwood would call the red-arrow drop a Disaaaahster dahling, but as I started back at the beginning of the year or before, it's not. That's the
longer view.
So I wouldn't buy heavily on oil now, but it could go up some more, or a lot more, but then drop like the proverbial.
Gold has dropped a lot, but the longer trouble carries on, it's likely to rise.
Bitcoin too will be volatile.
Al that volatility is a dogsend to the day trader.
It's simple as pie. Prices behave in the same way as always, most of the time.
The Korea fund price has a very obvious LEVEL at the 33% mark.
So you buy at the 33% level and sell at about 41%, then go short at about 39%, and rebuy that trade at about 34.
Those are conservative levels; 39 is after the drop is confirmed,34 is before the probable max gain is achieved, but it'll do.
I won't always work, but you use stop-losses, and
most of the time it'll work.
You lose if you get it wrong and hit the stop-loss, but you win several times that when you get it right.
Remember it's all, when day trading, at 5x, so , say, the drop from 39 to 34 on the chart, is a gain of (1.39/1.34) as a % is 18.6%, every few days.
YOu don't day-trade with OEIC funds, too slow, but they are less volatile.
ETF's are quicker and you can set stop-losses. You
can short them, though.
Shares , eg in Samsung and SK Hynix, are quickest to buy/sell and get value, but the most volatile.
You really need 24hr access - and never sleep, natch.
I'm in cash, mostly. but took a punt on Green Energy, and it's done a couple of % in the past 2 weeks.
Elon has just ordered a few sq miles worth of solar panels from Chieeena, and has a new battery plant.. Murricans are triggered on "gas" prices.