Outrageous Predictions
Switzerland's Green Revolution: CHF 30 Billion Initiative by 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Senior Relationship Manager
Summary: NonFarm Payroll Day
Good Morning
We are heading into the first “normal” Nonfarm Payroll release in quite some time. Expectations are for 60k jobs, 4.5% unemployment, and 3.6% growth in average earnings. While the initial reaction will likely follow the usual pattern, the bigger question is how relevant the data will be once digested. A key risk: How much pressure will the White House exert on the Fed, even in the face of potentially hawkish numbers?
We also expect rulings from the U.S. Supreme Court—most importantly on the legality of tariffs. According to Reuters, a reversal could require USD 150 billion in retrospective refunds.
Donald Trump is scheduled to meet the CEOs of big oil.
Outside the U.S., the data calendar includes:
Politics will likely dominate the news flow. Tensions around Greenland remain elevated, and the U.S. administration’s actions are increasingly viewed as heavy‑handed internationally. The erosion of trust and goodwill is becoming striking.
Other headlines:
Markets:
U.S. equities were mixed. Investors rotated from tech into cyclicals and defence amid uncertainty over the Fed’s rate‑cut trajectory and scrutiny of AI‑related spending.
Major tech names extended losses: Nvidia –2.2%, Broadcom –3.2%, Micron –3.7%, Oracle –1.7%.
Defence stocks rallied after President Trump proposed a $1.5 trillion military budget for 2027.
Energy names, including Exxon Mobil (+3.7%) and Chevron (+2.6%), advanced alongside a 4%+ rebound in crude.
The S&P 500 trades around 22x forward earnings, down from 23 in November but above the 5‑year average of 19.
FX & Rates:
The USD is testing 99, while 10‑year U.S. yields remain stable at 4.17%.
EURUSD 1.1650, GBPUSD 1.3430, USDJPY 157.40.
Precious Metals:
Gold and silver experienced another volatile session, swinging USD 3 within hours. Prices initially broke lower to the 73 handle, before rebounding to test 77.
Ole’s analysis highlights that annual index rebalancing is triggering mechanical, price‑insensitive futures selling after last year’s outsized gains. These flows are large in notional terms but concentrated in paper markets and do not signal weaker fundamentals. How prices behave during the five‑day rebalancing window will indicate whether recent gains were simply momentum‑driven or supported by deeper structural demand.
Why Defense is creeping into “core portfolio” conversations
Ruben pays homage to Warren Buffet: Investors love to say they ignore the messenger and follow the message. Then the messenger stops talking, and everyone suddenly checks the volume knob. Warren Buffett is dialing it down. In a 10 November 2025 letter, he says he will no longer write Berkshire Hathaway’s annual report and will step back from the annual meeting spotlight, “sort of”. That leaves a useful 2026 test: can the Berkshire process speak louder than the Buffett persona.