Japan Lower House election is getting something more volatility
Data:
🟦 Global Rates / Yields
- United States: UST 2Y ~3.53% | 10Y ~4.18% | 30Y ~4.80% — long-end yields remained elevated as markets priced policy credibility risk and sticky inflation.
- United Kingdom: 10Y Gilt ~4.39%, firm despite expectations of easing later in 2026.
- Germany: 10Y Bund ~2.83%, broadly stable with ECB policy outlook anchored.
- France: 10Y OAT ~3.49%, little changed.
- Italy: 10Y BTP ~3.42%, spreads contained.
- Japan: 10Y JGB ~2.17%, near multi-decade highs, continuing to anchor global yield dynamics.
- Australia: 10Y ACGB ~4.69%, elevated on persistent inflation risk.
- Canada: 10Y GoC ~3.36%, eased slightly alongside oil price weakness.
🟩 Equities — Major Index Moves
United States:
- S&P 500 (US500): 6,944.47 (+0.26%)
- Dow Jones: 49,442.44 (+0.60%)
- Nasdaq: 23,530.02 (+0.25%)
Gains were led by financials and select cyclicals, while mega-cap tech remained mixed.
Asia:
- Nikkei 225: ~53,906 (–0.8%), underperforming on tech rotation and policy sensitivity.
Europe:
- CAC 40: ~8,309 (–0.2%)
- Euro Stoxx 50 (EU50): ~6,046 (+0.6%)
- DAX (GER40): ~25,364 (+0.3%)
European equities stayed near record levels, supported by earnings momentum.
🟨 Macro / Economic Calendar
- Oil prices slumped sharply: WTI ~US$59/bbl (–4–5%), Brent ~US$64/bbl (–4%) after signals of de-escalation around Iran reduced geopolitical risk premium.
- Gold pulled back from record highs: Spot gold eased to ~US$4,610/oz after printing fresh all-time highs earlier in the week.
- Dollar strengthened modestly: DXY ~99.3, supported by firmer yields and solid U.S. data.
- Bank earnings in focus:S. lenders reported mixed results; margins and policy uncertainty continued to weigh on sentiment.
- Japan rates remained a global focal point: Elevated JGB yields continued to influence FX carry trades and global bond correlations.
- Equity leadership broadened: Rotation into financials and cyclicals offset softer performance in mega-cap tech.
Companies.
+) U.S. equities rebounded to snap a two-day losing streak, with the Dow +0.6%, S&P 500 +0.26%, and Nasdaq +0.25%, as investors leaned back into cyclicals and semiconductors while keeping a selective risk posture.
+) Semiconductors led the tape after TSMC delivered upbeat growth guidance and reiterated a larger U.S. manufacturing footprint; its U.S.-listed shares rose ~5.4%, pulling the broader chip complex higher.
+) Chip equipment names delivered outsized upside (risk-on within tech): Applied Materials, Lam Research, and KLA each gained >7%, consistent with “capex durability” expectations into 2026.
+) Financials provided a second pillar of support as major brokers posted better-than-expected profits on stronger dealmaking/trading, helping offset pockets of defensiveness elsewhere.
+) BlackRock rallied (~+3.8%) after reporting record AUM of ~$14.04 trillion, reinforcing the “scale + flows + markets” earnings narrative in asset management.
+) Market breadth improved versus the prior two sessions: mid- and small-caps outperformed, with the S&P 400 and Russell 2000 setting record highs—another signal of broadening participation.
+) Macro was not the primary driver, but jobless claims came in lower than expected, supporting the “soft-landing / later-year cuts possible” framing without forcing a repricing shock.
+) Volatility eased: VIX spot ~15.84 (≈ -5.4% on the day), consistent with the session’s rebound and reduced left-tail hedging demand.
+) Energy weighed as crude prices dropped sharply on reduced near-term geopolitical supply risk, creating a drag on energy-linked equities despite the broader equity rebound.
+) Health care underperformed amid stock-specific weakness in large constituents and medtech, highlighting continued intra-market dispersion even on up days.
+) Crypto-linked equities slipped, tracking softer digital-asset sentiment and policy-headline risk; COIN and HOOD were among notable laggards (see table).
+) In single-name action, the “earnings + guidance” impulse dominated: semis and financials outperformed on forward visibility, while policy/commodity sensitivity drove the principal laggards.
+) Europe traded soft-to-mixed, with investors balancing U.S. upside momentum against ongoing rate-path and growth uncertainties into late-January central-bank windows.
+) In Asia, the tone was mixed: Japan equities were modestly lower, and mainland China was slightly down, reflecting a more cautious regional risk appetite despite U.S. strength.
+) Overall, the session fit a “selective risk-on” template: investors paid up for earnings visibility (chips/financials) while trimming exposures most sensitive to oil moves, regulation, and headline volatility.
| Group | Company (Ticker) | Move | Primary driver (session narrative) |
| Gainer | KLA (KLAC) | +7.70% | Chip capex read-through after TSMC outlook; equipment complex bid |
| Gainer | BlackRock (BLK) | +6.21% | Record AUM disclosure and earnings momentum theme |
| Gainer | NRG Energy (NRG) | +6.07% | Utilities/defensive-cyclical rotation and stock-specific positioning |
| Gainer | Morgan Stanley (MS) | +5.82% | Profit beat; deal/trading tailwinds into reporting season |
| Gainer | Applied Materials (AMAT) | +5.75% | Equipment rally; semis reset higher on TSMC guidance |
| Loser | Robinhood (HOOD) | -7.79% | Risk-off in crypto-adjacent names; policy/headline sensitivity |
| Loser | Coinbase (COIN) | -6.48% | Crypto-policy headlines and risk de-grossing in digital-asset proxies |
| Loser | Devon Energy (DVN) | -4.22% | Oil drawdown pressured energy equities |
| Loser | Boston Scientific (BSX) | -3.96% | Health care sector weakness; stock-specific pressure |
| Loser | Charter Comm. (CHTR) | -3.82% | Stock-specific selling within comms/defensives; risk rotation |
General
Part 1 – Macro & Policy: Data-driven calm holds as markets reassess the pace of normalization
The macro backdrop remains broadly constructive but cautious, with markets continuing to digest recent inflation signals without forcing a material shift in policy expectations. In the U.S., disinflation momentum is acknowledged, yet policymakers remain focused on confirming durability rather than accelerating easing. Europe and the UK continue to face a softer growth profile, reinforcing a slower and more conditional normalization path. Overall, policy narratives remain well-anchored, keeping markets sensitive to incremental data rather than headline shifts.
Part 2 – FX & Rates: Relative-value trading dominates as yields stabilize
FX markets remain range-bound, with the U.S. dollar trading steadily as yield support moderates but safe-haven characteristics persist. Relative policy differentials continue to guide G10 moves, while the yen remains sensitive to global rate dynamics and carry positioning. Rates markets are orderly, with curves broadly stable as investors refrain from aggressive duration bets ahead of further inflation and growth confirmation later in the month.
Part 3 – Risk Assets & Commodities: Selective risk engagement continues amid cooling volatility
Risk assets show a measured tone, with equities supported by selective sector leadership rather than broad risk-on participation. Investors continue to favor quality balance sheets and earnings visibility, while credit conditions remain benign and supported by carry. In commodities, gold consolidates as real yields stabilize, and oil prices trade with reduced volatility as geopolitical risk premiums ease marginally. Cross-asset signals continue to point toward stabilization and differentiation rather than a decisive shift in risk appetite.
Upcoming News
Markets move into Friday with a late-week consolidation bias, as investors digest a dense run of inflation, growth, and China data while positioning ahead of the weekend. Overall market sense is neutral-to-cautiously constructive, with risk appetite supported by confirmation that inflation pressures are easing, but tempered by signs of moderation in real activity. FX and rates are expected to trade in ranges with event-driven bursts, while equities focus on whether macro outcomes support a soft-landing narrative into Q1.
In the United States, attention shifts to housing activity and consumer sentiment, notably Housing Starts, Building Permits, and the University of Michigan sentiment survey. Markets will assess whether higher mortgage rates earlier in the cycle continue to weigh on housing supply and demand, and whether consumers remain resilient after mixed retail signals. Softer housing alongside stable sentiment would reinforce expectations for Fed easing later in 2026, while resilience could help stabilize yields and support cyclical risk into the close.
Across Europe, the macro calendar is light following earlier CPI and activity releases, leaving EUR largely reactive to U.S. yields and cross-asset flows. In Asia–Pacific, Japan’s national CPI is the key regional catalyst, with implications for the Bank of Japan’s normalization debate and JPY sensitivity. China-related price action is expected to be spillover-driven after Thursday’s GDP and activity data. Corporate catalysts remain limited, keeping macro confirmation and positioning dynamics as the dominant drivers into the weekend.
| Time (GMT+7) | Category | Country / Region | Event | Market Relevance |
| 06:30 | 🔴 Red News | Japan | CPI (y/y) | Inflation trend; BoJ policy expectations and JPY sensitivity |
| 20:30 | 🔴 Red News | United States | Housing Starts | Housing cycle signal; USD and rates impact |
| 20:30 | 🔴 Red News | United States | Building Permits | Forward-looking construction indicator |
| 22:00 | 🔴 Red News | United States | Prelim UoM Consumer Sentiment | Confidence and demand outlook |
| 22:00 | 🔴 Red News | United States | Prelim UoM Inflation Expectations | Inflation psychology; Fed credibility |
| All day | 🔶 Stress / Headlines | Global | Week-end positioning / policy headlines | Can exaggerate moves into the close |
Snapshot – End 13.01.2026
FX
- DXY strengthened to 35 (+0.30%), supported by firmer U.S. yields and sustained demand for the dollar.
- GBP/USD edged higher to 3380 (+0.03%), while EUR/USD was broadly flat at 1.1609, reflecting muted European FX momentum.
- USD/JPY hovered near 61 (-0.01%), consolidating at elevated levels amid limited fresh catalysts.
- AUD/USD and NZD/USD posted marginal gains, while USD/CAD slipped slightly to 3890 (-0.03%).
Crypto
- Bitcoin declined to 95,581 (-1.40%), extending its corrective move after recent highs.
- Ethereum fell to 3,321 (-1.01%), while Solana underperformed at 31 (-2.95%).
- Optimism (OP) dropped sharply to 341 (-2.85%), reflecting broader risk-off sentiment in altcoins.
Commodities
- Gold eased to $4,606/oz (-0.19%), pressured by a stronger dollar.
- Silver retreated more sharply to $90.87/oz (-1.65%), underperforming gold.
- Copper slipped to $6.01 (-0.23%), signaling softer industrial demand expectations.
Equities / Indices
- S&P 500 rose modestly to 6,956.7 (+0.09%), supported by selective large-cap buying.
- Euro Stoxx 50 gained 09% to 6,030, while Dow Jones advanced to 49,501 (+0.06%).
- Nasdaq 100 outperformed, climbing to 25,547 (+0.32%), supported by tech resilience.
- VIX declined to 37 (-0.30%), indicating contained volatility despite mixed risk sentiment.
This report is provided to The Concept Trading from Van Hung Nguyen