QT_QuickTake

Market Quick Take - 8 January 2026

Macro 3 minutes to read
Saxo Be Invested
Saxo Strategy Team

Market Quick Take – 8 January 2026


Market drivers and catalysts

  • Equities: US slips on banks, Europe pauses on inflation and defense rotation, while Hong Kong pulls back on profit-taking.
  • Volatility: low VIX, cautious curve, payrolls risk
  • Digital Assets: bitcoin and ethereum softer, IBIT and ETHA weaker, ETF outflows
  • Fixed Income: Japanese government bonds rally hard on surprise wage data. US Treasuries follow JGB’s lead in Asian session.
  • Currencies: JPY firms on strength in JGB’s Thursday. AUD and GBP weaker after recent standout strength.
  • Commodities: Gold and silver fall as annual commodity index rebalancing starts
  • Macro events: US Dec Challenger Job Cuts & Weekly Jobless Claims

Macro headlines

  • US private sector jobs grew by 41K in December 2025, recovering from November’s 29K loss. Education/health and leisure/hospitality led gains. Professional services, information, and manufacturing saw cuts. Pay growth remained at 4.4% for job-stayers and rose to 6.6% for job-changers.
  • Japan's nominal wages increased 0.5% YoY in November 2025, down from October's 2.5% and below the expected 2.3%, affected by a 17% drop in bonuses. Real wages fell 2.8% as consumer prices rose 3.3%, squeezing incomes and complicating the BoJ’s outlook amid inflation concerns.
  • The US ISM Services PMI rose to 54.4 in December 2025, up from 52.6 in November, surpassing expectations and marking the strongest growth since October 2024. All subindexes expanded, including business activity and new orders, while price pressures eased and supplier deliveries slowed.
  • US job openings fell by 303,000 to 7.146 million in November 2025, below expectations and the lowest since September 2024. Declines were seen in several sectors, with construction rising. All regions experienced drops, while hires and separations remained unchanged at 5.1 million.
  • Trump plans to ban large investors from buying single-family homes and urges Congress to codify it. He opposed defense contractors' excessive dividends and buybacks. Treasury Secretary Bessent confirmed a tax exemption on American car loan interest.

Macro calendar highlights (times in GMT)

0900 – ECB 1- and 3-year CPI Expectations
1330 – US Dec Challenger Job Cuts
1330 – US Initial Jobless Claims
1530 – EIA Weekly Natural Gas Storage Change

Earnings events

  • Today: Fast Retailing, Aeon, Seven and I Holdings

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


Equities

  • USA: The S&P 500 slips 0.3% and the Dow falls 0.9%, while the Nasdaq 100 edges up 0.1% as leadership rotates from banks to big tech. Job openings in the JOLTS report drop sharply, while ADP hiring and a firmer ISM services reading keep the “soft landing” story alive, leaving rate expectations choppy ahead of Friday’s payrolls. JPMorgan drops 2.3% as banks lag, Alphabet rises 2.5% as investors lean back into artificial intelligence, Blackstone falls 5.6% on policy risk around institutional home buying, and Valero gains 3.1% on hopes for more Venezuelan heavy crude feeding refiners.
  • Europe: European equities finish narrowly lower, with the STOXX Europe 600 slightly down and the Euro STOXX 50 down 0.1%, while the UK FTSE 100 slides 0.7%. Eurozone December inflation prints at 2.0% and core inflation eases, which supports the case for rate cuts later in 2026 even if the European Central Bank stays cautious near-term. Financials weigh, with ING down 2.8% and BBVA down 6.7%, while defense runs hot as Rheinmetall rises almost 5.0% and Thales jumps 8.3% on renewed geopolitical headlines.
  • Asia: Hong Kong fades after a strong run, with the Hang Seng down 0.9% to 26,459 as profit-taking meets fresh geopolitical noise. China’s move to tighten controls on some dual-use exports to Japan dents sentiment, even as the People’s Bank of China talks up room for reserve requirement ratio (RRR) and rate cuts to support growth. Tencent Music drops 5.1%, Kuaishou falls 3.0%, Meituan loses 2.2%, and SMIC slips 2.0%, leaving investors watching whether policy support can offset higher trade and security friction.

Volatility

  • Market volatility remains contained, but investors are quietly paying for protection. The VIX closed at 15.38, still a low level by historical standards, yet the VIX futures curve sits higher, signalling that investors are more cautious about the days and weeks ahead than today’s calm market suggests. The key focus is US labour data, with weekly jobless claims today followed by Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report. These releases matter because they can quickly shift expectations around interest rates and economic momentum. Geopolitical risks also remain in the background, with Venezuela-related oil headlines acting as a reminder that energy markets can still transmit shocks to broader sentiment.
  • Skew check (today’s expiry): downside protection remains in demand, with puts priced richer than calls around the money.
  • Expected move (SPX, this week): options imply roughly ±48 points (about ±0.7%) into Friday’s close.

Digital Assets

  • Digital assets are softer this morning as risk appetite cools ahead of key US data. Bitcoin trades near $90,000, while ethereum sits around $3,100, with most major altcoins also under pressure. ETF pricing reflects this cautious tone: IBIT is lower around $51.5, while ETHA trades near $23.7.
  • Flows reinforce the message, with US spot bitcoin ETFs seeing notable net outflows yesterday and smaller outflows from ethereum ETFs. This suggests investors are reducing exposure rather than adding risk ahead of payrolls. That said, assets under management in both IBIT and ETHA remain large, meaning sentiment can shift quickly if macro data surprises or yields move lower.

Fixed Income

  • Japan’s government bonds rallied strongly on the huge surprise in the latest wage data (see above), with the 2-year benchmark yield plunging over four basis points by late in the Thursday session in Tokyo to near 1.13%, while the 10-year benchmark JGB yield fell nearly five basis points to 2.07%.
  • Despite firm US data, US treasury yields followed the lead from the Japanese bond market in Asian hours Thursday, with the the 2-year benchmark treasury yield edging back toward cycle lows, trading 3.45%, and the 10-year benchmark treasury yield easing back a couple of basis points to 4.13%.

Commodities

  • Oil trades steady, with Brent holding onto the USD 60 handle as traders digest fresh US measures on Venezuela, including indefinite oversight of future crude sales and the seizure of two additional sanctioned tankers. While geopolitical risk is preventing a deeper sell-off for now, the prospect of higher Venezuelan exports has already weighed on Canadian crude prices and risks adding barrels to a market that is already grappling with ample supply.
  • Gold and silver remain under pressure as the annual commodity-index rebalancing gets underway. Over the next five days, COMEX futures could see selling in the region of USD 6–7 billion in each metal. How prices behave during the coming week will be an important signal of underlying demand strength, and whether the recent rally was primarily momentum- and FOMO-driven. However, worth noting silver and platinum’s two-day declines of 8% and 10% have so far only unwound about half of their early-January gains.

Currencies

  • The JPY firmed Thursday in Asia on far weaker than expected Japanese wage data (see above), which further disrupted the recent dynamic of ever rising Japanese government bond yields. After trading 156.95 early Thursday, USDJPY rallied toward 156.50 by early European hours.
  • The US dollar traded mixed, firming somewhat on Wednesday, especially against recent standouts on the strong side, AUD and GBP. AUDUSD hit new highs since late 2024 at 0.6767, but dropped back below 0.6700 in Asian hours Thursday. Likewise, after hitting multi-month highs above 1.3550 Tuesday, GBPUSD slid below 1.3500 on Wednesday and even as lowas 1.3450 in Thursday’s Asia session.

For a global look at markets – go to Inspiration.

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