“The Dollar’s Doing Great” – Donald Trump.
Data:
1) Global Rates / Yields — Key Benchmarks
- United States: 10Y ~4.21–4.23% | 2Y ~3.60–3.62%, yields remained elevated as markets balanced Fed patience with fiscal supply concerns.
- United Kingdom: 10Y Gilt ~4.49–4.51%, supported by sticky inflation expectations.
- Germany: 10Y Bund ~2.87–2.89%, largely stable.
- France: 10Y OAT ~3.52–3.54%, little changed.
- Italy: 10Y BTP ~3.46–3.48%, spreads contained.
- Japan: 10Y JGB ~2.24–2.26%, near multi-decade highs, remaining the main global volatility anchor.
- Australia: 10Y ACGB ~4.73–4.76%, elevated amid inflation persistence.
- Canada: 10Y GoC ~3.42–3.45%, tracking U.S. Treasuries.
- China: 10Y CGB ~1.83–1.84%, stable under accommodative policy stance.
2) Equity Index Moves
United States (Mon 26 Jan Close)
- S&P 500 (US500): ~6,950 (+0.4–0.6%)
- Nasdaq: ~23,600 (+0.4%)
- Dow Jones: ~49,400 (+0.6%)
S. equities rebounded on easing trade fears and selective tech leadership.
Europe (Mon close):
- Euro Stoxx 50 (EU50): ~5,940 (flat to –0.2%)
- DAX (GER40): ~24,900 (flat)
- CAC 40: ~8,110 (flat)
European equities paused after earlier tariff-related volatility.
Asia (Tue 27Jan early):
- Nikkei 225: ~53,500–53,700 (–0.3% to –0.5%), pressured by yen strength and bond-market volatility.
3) Prior‑Day Macro / “Red News”
- Japan: Industrial production & leading indicators signaled softer momentum, reinforcing sensitivity to FX and rates.
- Asia ex-Japan: Singapore industrial production (Dec) contracted sharply y/y, highlighting weak global electronics demand.
- United States: No Tier-1 data releases; focus shifted to upcoming FOMC communication and PCE inflation later in the week.
4) High‑Impact Market Headlines
- Safe-haven surge: Gold pushed to fresh record highs above $5,000/oz, reflecting persistent geopolitical and policy uncertainty.
- Yen volatility: The JPY strengthened sharply on intervention speculation, weighing on Japanese equities and influencing global FX positioning.
- Rates still the constraint: Elevated U.S. and Japanese yields continued to cap global equity upside despite recent rebounds.
- Trade risk legacy: Markets remained cautious after recent S.–Europe tariff rhetoric, with exporters still sensitive.
- Oil range-bound: Crude prices consolidated as geopolitical risk offset demand concerns.
- Earnings focus: Attention turned toward mega-cap tech earnings and their potential to drive index-level volatility.
Companies.
+) S&P 500 hit a fresh record high as earnings momentum continued, with the index closing near the 7,000 psychological level amid a heavy results cycle.
+) Health insurers were the key shock: a Medicare Advantage payment proposal implying only a modest rate uplift triggered a sharp selloff across the group.
+) UnitedHealth plunged ~18.7%, Humana slid ~19.6%, and CVS fell ~12.2%, dominating downside leadership and dragging the Dow lower despite broader strength elsewhere.
+) General Motors jumped ~9% after results underscored strong core profits and improved confidence around cash generation / shareholder returns.
+) Boeing posted a Q4 profit, helping stabilize sentiment in industrial cyclicals as investors focused on recovery trajectory and execution.
+) UPS rallied ~4.8% on earnings, reinforcing the “macro bellwether” bid and supporting transport-linked sentiment.
+) FedEx gained ~3% alongside UPS, adding to the view that parcel/logistics demand is stabilizing.
+) Corning surged ~15% after announcing a ~$6 billion fiber-optic supply deal with Meta, spotlighting the AI/data-center infrastructure buildout theme.
+) Mega-cap tech provided index support, with Apple, Broadcom, Nvidia, Microsoft, and Amazon all contributing positively on the day.
+) AI-linked leadership stayed intact at the index level, but trading remained highly bifurcated, with some cyclicals and defensives lagging even as tech held up.
+) Small caps continued to outperform in January, signaling broader risk appetite extending beyond mega-cap concentration.
+) Fed policy focus intensified as the market headed into the start of a two-day FOMC meeting (rates expected to be held), keeping positioning tactical into the decision window.
+) U.S. consumer confidence dropped to its lowest since 2014, adding a macro caution flag even as equities pushed higher.
+) Overall tape: “Earnings + policy-path positioning” drove price action, while the Medicare-rate headline created a major sector-specific drawdown inside an otherwise constructive market.
** Winners/ Losers:
| Ticker | Company | Move | Key Driver |
| LMT | Lockheed Martin | +2% | Defense spending optimism |
| UNH | UnitedHealth | +1–2% | Earnings stability |
| PG | Procter & Gamble | +1–2% | Defensive inflows |
| CVX | Chevron | +1–2% | Oil price strength |
| MRK | Merck | +1% | Healthcare bid |
| Ticker | Company | Move | Key Driver |
| TSLA | Tesla | -2% | Margin concerns |
| NTAP | NetApp | -2% | Enterprise IT caution |
| DELL | Dell Technologies | -1–2% | Capex sensitivity |
| ROKU | Roku | -1–2% | Advertising uncertainty |
| AAPL | Apple | -1% | Pre-earnings positioning |
General
Currency Overview: FX markets remain range-bound as investors await clearer macro confirmation
G10 FX traded with subdued volatility, reflecting a continued preference for relative-value positioning over directional exposure. Liquidity was stable, but conviction remained limited as markets balanced easing inflation trends against still-uncertain growth momentum, reinforcing consolidation across major currency pairs.
EUR: Euro stabilizes as rate differentials offset fragile growth signals
The euro traded narrowly as support from stable ECB policy expectations and contained U.S.–EU rate spreads offset ongoing concerns about weak Eurozone activity. EUR price action remained driven by relative policy considerations rather than a material improvement in the regional macro outlook.
GBP: Sterling holds steady but remains capped by UK growth concerns
Sterling consolidated in a tight range, supported by global yield dynamics but constrained by persistent concerns over the UK’s subdued growth outlook and fiscal sensitivity. GBP continued to behave as a global-rates proxy rather than responding to domestic catalysts.
USD: Dollar trades mixed as easing expectations balance liquidity demand
The U.S. dollar was little changed, as expectations for gradual Fed easing tempered yield support while its role as a liquidity anchor continued to attract defensive flows. The result was a balanced session without a clear directional bias.
JPY: Yen remains pressured as carry dynamics dominate
The yen stayed weak as stable global yields and low volatility continued to encourage carry positioning. In the absence of fresh guidance from Japanese policymakers, JPY remained primarily driven by external rate differentials rather than safe-haven demand.
Precious Metals: Gold and silver consolidate on contained real yields
Gold and silver traded sideways, supported by contained real yields and residual hedge demand. However, calmer risk sentiment and the lack of new geopolitical escalation limited momentum-driven inflows.
Energy: Oil prices trade cautiously amid demand uncertainty
Brent and WTI moved in a narrow range as markets balanced supply discipline and geopolitical risk against lingering uncertainty over global demand. Energy pricing continued to imply limited inflationary pressure from crude at current levels.
Equity Flow: Investors remain selective, favoring quality over beta
Equity flows reflected late-cycle discipline, with investors favoring large-cap quality, defensives, and earnings visibility. Broader risk appetite remained selective rather than expansionary.
Geopolitics: Structural risks persist without triggering volatility
Key geopolitical themes—including U.S.–China strategic competition and ongoing regional conflicts—remained unchanged during the session. These risks continued to weigh on medium-term sentiment but did not provoke abrupt market repricing.
Corporate Focus: Earnings visibility and margin discipline dominate attention
Investor focus stayed centered on companies with strong balance sheets, pricing power, and conservative guidance. Firms exposed to demand uncertainty or cost pressures faced heightened scrutiny as earnings season progressed.
Systemic View: Markets signal consolidation rather than transition
Across asset classes, price action pointed to stabilization and differentiation rather than a decisive move toward risk-on or stress. Financial conditions remained supportive, but investors stayed cautious, awaiting clearer confirmation from data and corporate earnings.
Upcoming News
Markets head into Wednesday with a high-conviction, policy-centric setup, as the FOMC policy decision becomes the dominant macro catalyst for global FX, rates, and risk assets. Overall market sense is cautious and tightly risk-managed, with positioning trimmed ahead of the announcement and volatility expected to spike around the policy statement and Chair Powell’s press conference. With inflation having moderated but growth signals still mixed, markets are focused less on the policy rate itself and more on forward guidance, balance-sheet language, and the Fed’s confidence in a 2026 easing trajectory.
In the United States, the FOMC outcome will set the tone into month-end. A message emphasizing data dependence and progress on disinflation would likely cap USD upside and support front-end Treasuries, while any pushback against easing expectations—particularly via services inflation or labour resilience—could trigger a sharp repricing higher in yields and a defensive USD bid. GDP (advance) earlier in the U.S. session adds another layer of risk, offering a timely read on whether growth is slowing in line with policy objectives or proving more resilient than expected.
Across Europe, attention turns to ECB-related sentiment and rate differentials, with EUR trading primarily as a function of U.S. yields and the Fed’s tone. In the Asia–Pacific region, Australia’s inflation data provides a key regional input for RBA expectations, influencing AUD positioning ahead of the FOMC spillover. Corporate catalysts remain limited, ensuring that today’s session is overwhelmingly macro- and policy-driven..
| Time (GMT+7) | Category | Country / Region | Event | Market Relevance |
| 08:30 | 🔴 Red News | Australia | CPI (q/q) | Inflation pulse; RBA expectations and AUD sensitivity |
| 20:30 | 🔴 Red News | United States | GDP (Q4, Advance) | Growth trajectory; USD and Treasury impact |
| 20:30 | 🔴 Red News | United States | GDP Price Index | Inflation embedded in growth; policy relevance |
| 22:00 | 🔴 Red News | United States | FOMC Rate Decision | Primary policy catalyst; FX, rates, equities |
| 22:30 | 🔴 Red News | United States | FOMC Press Conference | Forward guidance; volatility driver |
| All day | 🔶 Stress / Headlines | Global | FOMC-driven volatility / policy headlines | Can dominate all asset classes |
Snapshot
FX
- DXY fell sharply to 82 (-1.28%), extending the USD downtrend and marking a broad-based dollar selloff.
- EUR/USD slipped to 2023 (-0.13%), consolidating after recent gains despite USD weakness.
- GBP/USD edged lower to 3826 (-0.11%), showing mild profit-taking.
- USD/JPY rebounded to 52 (+0.23%), stabilizing after aggressive yen strength earlier in the week.
- USD/CHF rose to 7630 (+0.23%), while USD/CAD ticked up to 1.3590 (+0.09%).
- AUD/USD and NZD/USD both weakened (-0.20%), lagging amid softer risk sentiment in Asia.
Crypto
- Bitcoin rose to $87,366 (+1.3%), extending its recovery phase.
- Ethereum jumped to $3,028 (+3.5%), outperforming BTC.
- Solana advanced to $127.41 (+2.6%).
- Optimism (OP) edged up to $0.302 (+1.3%), maintaining short-term momentum.
Commodities
- Gold pulled back to $5,165/oz (-0.3%), consolidating after the recent rally driven by USD weakness.
- Silver declined to $111.48/oz (-0.6%), pausing after strong outperformance.
- Copper eased to $5.98/lb (-0.2%), reflecting cautious industrial demand.
- Energy markets remained subdued, with no strong directional catalyst..
Equities / Indices
- S&P 500 closed at 6,987 (+0.05%), narrowly higher as gains were capped by macro uncertainty.
- Euro Stoxx 50 rose to 5,988 (+0.06%), supported by defensives.
- Dow Jones advanced to 49,072 (+0.02%).
- Nasdaq 100 outperformed, climbing to 25,394 (+0.9%), driven by continued strength in large-cap tech.
- VIX declined to 42 (-0.5%), indicating slightly improved risk appetite.
- CAC 40 gained to 8,153 (+0.3%), outperforming regional peers.
This report is provided to The Concept Trading from Van Hung Nguyen