QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 21 January 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read
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Saxo Strategy Team

Market Quick Take – 21 January 2026


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: Stocks fell in the US and Europe on Greenland tariff threats, while Japan and Hong Kong ended lower on risk-off trading.
  • Volatility: Greenland tensions, risk-off, VIX >20, SPX ±1.4% expected move
  • Digital assets: Risk-off, BTC below $90k, altcoins softer, IBIT/ETHA outflows
  • Currencies: USD weakens on US-Europe confrontation over Greenland. JPY mixed.
  • Commodities: Gold and platinum reach fresh records while silver takes a breather
  • Fixed Income: US treasuries and JGBs stabilising following Tuesday’s sharp selloff
  • Macro: US Pending Home Sales and 20-year Bond Auction.

Macro headlines

  • US stocks suffered their worst single-day sell-off since last October on the combination of unease over US-Europe tensions over President Trump’s demands for buying Greenland and on the risk of escalating trade tensions, as well as on the rise in treasury yields after Tuesday’s steep sell-off in Japanese government bonds, which saw a degree of contagion across world bond markets.
  • Japan’s government bond yields at the long end of the yield curve fell sharply Wednesday, erasing a significant portion of the Tuesday spike on comments from Japan’s officialdom on the need to keep calm and as Japan’s second largest bank said it was set to make large JGB purchases. More below in fixed income coverage.
  • US private employers added an average of 8,000 jobs per week in the four weeks ending December 27, 2025, down from 11,250 previously, indicating a slight slowdown in hiring momentum, according to ADP Research.
  • Trump threatened 200% tariffs on French wines and champagne after France planned to decline joining his 'Board of Peace.' A White House official said he won't attend the emergency G7 summit in Paris.
  • US Treasury Secretary Bessent stated that there are four outstanding candidates for the new Fed chair position, with an announcement possibly coming by next week..

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

0700 – UK December CPI
0900 – IEA's Monthly Oil Market Report
1500 – US Nov. Pending Home Sales
1800 – US Treasury to Auction 20-year notes
0030 – Australia Dec. Employment Data

Earnings events

  • Today: Johnson & Johnson, Charles Schwab, Prologis, Kinder Morgan
  • Thursday: Visa, LVMH, SK Hynix, Procter & Gamble, GE Aerospace, Intel, Abbott Laboratories, Intuitive Surgical, KLA Corp, Capital One Financial, Freeport McMoRan, CSX Corporation
  • Friday: SLB

For all macro, earnings, and dividend events check Saxo’s calendar.


Equities

  • USA: Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 1.8% to 48,488, the S&P 500 fell 2.1% to 6,797, and the Nasdaq dropped 2.4% to 22,954 as Greenland tariff headlines revived trade-war nerves; Treasury yields rose and the dollar weakened. High-beta growth led losses: Nvidia sank 4.4%, Broadcom slid 5.4%, and Tesla fell 4.2% as investors cut exposure to the most crowded winners and pushed volatility higher. Netflix eased 0.8% in the session but dropped about 5.0% after the close as a modest earnings beat was outweighed by deal and cost headlines; focus now shifts to the next tariff signals and upcoming mega-cap results.
  • Europe: European stocks ended lower as the Greenland dispute kept trade risk in the driving seat. The STOXX 600 slipped 0.7% to 602.8, with Germany’s DAX down 1.0% to 24,747 and the UK’s FTSE 100 off 0.7% to 10,127. Luxury lagged as LVMH fell 2.2% on fresh tariff threats aimed at French wine and champagne, while Wise jumped 16.0% after upbeat results and guidance; Renault rose 2.3% on higher 2025 sales and TotalEnergies gained 1.4% on resilient refining margins. Investors now look for any tariff walk-back and the next batch of earnings.
  • Asia: Asia finished softer as politics and policy headlines kept bond yields and risk appetite in motion. Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 1.1% to 52,991 and the Topix dropped 0.8% to 3,625 as fiscal worries grew after talk of a zero food sales tax and a February 8 election. SoftBank slipped 3.3% and Tokyo Electron fell 2.6% as higher yields weighed on big tech-linked names. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng eased 0.3% to 26,488 and the Hang Seng Tech Index fell 1.2%, although China Taiping Insurance climbed 4.4% after a strong profit outlook. Next up: any China policy signals and more on US tariffs.

Volatility

  • Market volatility picked up sharply as geopolitics and fiscal concerns returned to centre stage. Renewed rhetoric around Greenland and potential U.S.–Europe trade measures weighed on risk sentiment, while rising government bond yields, particularly in Japan, added to unease about global fiscal sustainability. Against this backdrop, investors leaned more defensively, pushing the VIX above 20 as equities sold off. Short-dated stress signals remain elevated, with very near-term volatility rising faster than longer-dated measures, suggesting continued sensitivity to headlines and policy comments in the days ahead.
  • Based on current options pricing, the S&P 500 is implying a weekly expected move of roughly ±1.4% (around ±95 points) into Friday. Looking at today’s options expiration, pricing shows a mild upside skew, with calls trading slightly richer than puts near spot, pointing to lingering demand for upside exposure despite the defensive tone.

Digital Assets

  • Digital assets weakened alongside global equities as risk appetite faded. Bitcoin slipped back below the $90,000 level, while ether and major altcoins such as Solana and XRP also traded lower. The move was less about crypto-specific fundamentals and more a reflection of broader macro pressure, including geopolitical uncertainty and concerns about global debt dynamics. Safe-haven flows into gold contrasted with outflows from more speculative assets.
  • ETF flows echoed this caution. Bitcoin and ethereum spot ETFs both recorded net outflows, with IBIT and ETHA among the weaker performers, signalling short-term risk reduction rather than a shift away from long-term adoption. For investors, the message remains that crypto continues to behave as a high-beta risk asset in periods of geopolitical stress, even as regulatory discussions in the U.S. progress slowly in the background.

Fixed Income

  • Japan’s government bonds found support Wednesday after Tuesday’s significant alarming spike in the longest yields, with the benchmark 30-year yield retreating some ten basis points to near 3.77% in late Tokyo trading, nearly cutting the prior day’s yield rise in half. The benchmark 10-year yields dropped back some six basis points to 2.30% while the two-year actually rose slightly, remaining anchored near 1.23% as the latest drama has not yet seen rising anticipation of imminent further Bank of Japan rate hikes..
  • US treasuries sold off sharply Tuesday, likely in part on contagion from the instability in Japanese government bonds. After Friday saws the key 10-year benchmark US treasury yield rising above the range of the prior few months, it rose another seven basis points to close near 4.29% after testing above 4.30% at one point. Treasuries found a bit of support in Asian hours Wednesday and at the shorter end of the curve, the 2-year benchmark treasury yield remains anchored just below 3.60% for now.
  • High yield US corporate bonds sold off amidst weak risk sentiment Tuesday. The Bloomberg measure of high yield bond spreads to US treasuries widened 10 basis points to 261 basis points, a day after closing at the tightest spread since 2007.

Commodities

  • Gold and platinum hit fresh record highs, with gold reaching USD 4,878 and platinum USD 2,511, while silver holds near its own record peak, albeit with early signs of rotation from silver back into gold. The move is being supported by unease over Trump’s tariff threats and a recent meltdown in Japanese government bonds (see above). In addition, central-bank demand — a key anchor for gold since 2022 — remains firm, with the Bank of Poland approving plans to purchase 150 tonnes.
  • Industrial metals also benefited from the surge in gold, as traders and investors continue to seek hard assets as a hedge against geopolitical risks, fiscal debt concerns, and a weaker dollar. Copper, in particular, held firm, supported by speculation that continued flows to the U.S. could drain supply from the rest of the world at a time when electrification demand remains strong and mine output continues to fall short of production targets.
  • Crude prices softened, tracking weakness across bond and equity markets amid continued focus on a well-supplied oil market — a message likely to be reinforced when the IEA, which has warned of a glut, releases its monthly outlook later today. That said, a disruption at a major Kazakh field, and the risk of further outages, has kept Brent near the top of its recent range, finding support ahead of USD 63.50.

Currencies

  • The US dollar weakened sharply on Tuesday, especially against a firm euro and the Swiss franc, which seems to be offering some safe haven appeal. The EURUSD rate rose well back above 1.1700 in Tuesday’s session, easing back to just below 1.1720 in the Asian session Wednesady from the brief spike high to 1.1768 Tuesday. USDCHF fell sharply Tuesday, threatening below 0.7900 at one point before bouncing back above that level as global risk sentiment stabilized Wednesday in Asia.
  • The Japanese yen was calm in Asia’s Wednesday session, with USDJPY hovering just above 158.00 late in Asia’s Wednesday trading hours.
  • Sterling sold off yesterday despite strong labor market data, perhaps on the combination of President Trump casting negative attention on the UK over its plans to pass the Chagos Islands, which host a strategic US airbase, to Mauritius, but also as the UK approved the building of a large Chinese embassy in London and amidst widespread weak risk sentiment, which the currency has proven sensitive to in the past. EURGBP rose clear of 0.8700 Tuesday and hit a high of 0.8731 before dropping back.

For a global look at markets – go to Inspiration.

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