Outrageous Predictions
Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026
Saxo Group
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: Global markets opened December on uncertain footing, but improving US data and a sharp rotation into autos, banks and AI-driven names helped restore confidence by week’s end. With the Fed’s final meeting of the year approaching, investors now face a pivotal stretch where even small shifts in policy tone could reshape the landscape into 2026.
Soft-landing hopes meet higher yields
The first week of December opened on a cautious tone as weak US manufacturing data, a sharp early-week bitcoin sell-off and firmer volatility led investors to trim risk. Sentiment improved later as softer US inflation, resilient services activity and mixed but stable labour indicators supported the soft-landing narrative. Europe saw rotation into autos and banks, while Asia balanced China concerns with renewed momentum in Hong Kong tech and consumer names.
Market pulse: investors ended the week more confident about a December Fed cut, yet more aware that global yields may stay higher for longer.
Tech pauses as cyclicals and Europe’s autos and banks take the lead
Market pulse: equity leadership broadened beyond US mega-cap tech, with cyclicals, European autos and banks playing a larger role in weekly gains.
Surface calm ahead of the Fed
Volatility firmed early in the week as the VIX pushed back into the high teens, reflecting Monday’s risk-off tone, before easing consistently as equities stabilised. By Friday, the VIX sat in the mid-15s, with short-dated VIX1D and VIX9D signals subdued, showing persistent demand for insurance rather than fear. SPX options into the 5 December expiry priced roughly ±1.1%, while the curve into the 12 December post-FOMC expiry implied a ±1.3% move. Skew remained modestly negative, with puts still trading at a premium to calls.
Market pulse: implied volatility is calm, but pricing leaves little room for policy surprises.
Crypto steadies after a sharp reset
Bitcoin began the week under pressure, briefly falling below USD 84,000, before rebounding toward USD 92,000–93,000. Ether climbed above USD 3,100–3,200 after the Fusaka upgrade improved network efficiency. ETF flows mirrored spot volatility: IBIT and ETHA saw early-week outflows before recovering alongside the underlying coins. Options activity tilted toward income-generating structures, with covered calls and put-writing across COIN and selected miners, while long-dated upside call structures in IBIT and MicroStrategy indicated constructive but risk-managed positioning.
Market pulse: the crypto complex is in rebuilding mode, favouring structured exposure rather than outright directional risk.
Japan leads the global yield repricing
Japanese government bonds were again the focal point, with 10-year JGB yields approaching 2% and 2-year yields making fresh cycle highs as markets increasingly priced a Bank of Japan rate hike on 19 December. US Treasuries traded within narrow but upward-sloping ranges, with the 10-year around 4.1% and the 2-year between 3.5–3.6%, as softer core PCE inflation offset concerns about rising long-term supply. In Europe, the German 10-year Bund yield climbed toward 2.8%, testing the upper end of its multi-month range as investors reassessed how quickly ECB policy may ease in 2026.
Market pulse: bond markets continue adjusting to a higher-for-longer backdrop, with Japan’s shift acting as the global volatility anchor.
Silver surges, natural gas breaks out
Silver briefly surged above USD 59 per ounce following tight-inventory narratives and short-covering flows, before pulling back into the USD 58 area. Gold lagged, trading within a well-defined range below USD 4,245, signalling hesitancy despite softer yields. In energy, US natural gas futures moved above USD 5 per MMBtu for the first time since 2022 due to cold-weather forecasts, while Brent and WTI held modest gains as geopolitical risks in the Black Sea and Venezuela offset concerns over ample supply. Copper remained supported by electrification-driven demand and supply constraints.
Market pulse: commodity markets show pockets of tightness, but broad conditions remain orderly.
Dollar softens; yen and loonie take centre stage
The US dollar weakened over the week as markets leaned toward another Fed cut, with EURUSD pushing above 1.1650. The yen remained volatile: USDJPY dipped toward 155.00 on BoJ tightening chatter before retracing as Japan’s weak consumption data tempered hawkish expectations. Sterling outperformed after key technical levels broke in GBPUSD and EURGBP, while the Canadian dollar rallied sharply after a surprise drop in unemployment to 6.5%, which pushed front-end Canadian yields higher and sent USDCAD down more than 1%.
Market pulse: USD softness is broadening, but idiosyncratic stories in JPY, GBP and CAD are driving relative FX performance.
Fed, Powell and AI-heavy earnings dominate the calendar
The Federal Reserve’s final meeting of the year is the centrepiece. Markets widely expect a third consecutive 25 bp cut, bringing the policy rate to 3.5–3.75%. With economic data still partially delayed by the US government shutdown, Chair Powell’s press conference becomes the main source of guidance on the trajectory for labour markets, inflation persistence and the pace of easing in 2026. Updated projections and the dot plot may challenge current market pricing if policymakers signal a shallower easing path.
Corporate earnings add an important layer. AutoZone reports Tuesday, followed by Oracle, Adobe and Synopsys on Wednesday, offering insight into AI infrastructure demand and enterprise software budgets. Thursday brings Broadcom, Costco and Lululemon, with retail and semiconductor trends in focus. Macro data releases — including job openings, jobless claims, trade balance and the federal budget — will help refine expectations ahead of year-end positioning.
Market pulse: the week is dense with catalysts, and even small divergences in Fed language or earnings guidance could quickly shift volatility from its subdued levels.
A quiet surface over moving currents
Global markets entered December cautiously but regained composure as softer US inflation and stronger services data anchored the soft-landing narrative. Beneath the calm indices, several dynamics accelerated: Japan’s yield repricing, Europe’s rotation into autos and banks, silver’s squeeze and notable FX shifts in the yen and Canadian dollar. For long-term investors, the message is discipline and diversification. For active traders, low front-end implied volatility and multiple catalysts provide scope for selective, risk-defined positioning as the year approaches its close.
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