Here is a theory worth taking seriously, even if the official record will never write it down. The Israeli new shekel (NIS) has just staged one of the most powerful currency rallies in its modern history, and one of the loudest foreign believers in Israel planted his flag at almost exactly the moment the tide turned. Correlation is not causation. But when a marquee investor spends two years telling the world there has never been a better time to own Israel, and the price of owning Israel then goes straight up, it is fair to ask how much of that move was confidence, and whose confidence it was.
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The Currency Run Few Saw Coming
Rewind to the depths. On October 4, 2023, the shekel had already slipped to roughly 3.85 per US dollar, a 7.5-year low. After the October 7 attack the selling accelerated, and on October 27, 2023 the shekel bottomed at 4.08 per dollar, its weakest in 11 years, per the Times of Israel. Almost nobody, at that moment of maximum fear, was forecasting what came next.
What came next was a tear. After the June 2025 ceasefire that ended the Israel-Iran Twelve-Day War, the shekel strengthened roughly 4.5 percent against the dollar to its best level since end-2022, and it added about 2.0 percent in the third quarter of 2025, according to the Bank of Israel's Q3 2025 foreign exchange report. Over roughly a year USD/ILS fell about 18.83 percent, from 3.691 to 2.996, and around April 2026 the shekel pushed below 3.00 per dollar for the first time in about 31 years, as the Times of Israel documented. A currency does not move from an 11-year low to a 31-year high by accident.
