Spain’s nine-month Letras auction saw a marginal decrease in yield, dropping to 1.998% from 1.999%. This slight change reflects the broader financial sentiment amidst global trade tensions.
Gold reached a new high, trading above $4,700 due to increasing geopolitical risks and heightened trade war concerns. The rise in gold prices corresponds with a decline in the US Dollar, driving investors towards safer assets.
Currency Fluctuations Amidst Uncertainty
Simultaneously, several currency pairs showed fluctuations amidst global economic uncertainties. EUR/CHF edged towards a four-week low as trade tensions boosted the Swiss Franc, while EUR/USD climbed to a two-week high above 1.1700.
Bitcoin experienced a downturn, trading below $91,000, as tensions over Greenland influenced market movements. Meanwhile, Trump’s recent threats of tariffs on European goods could impact future market dynamics significantly.
We must remember the broad “Sell America” trade that defined much of last year, fueled by escalating trade tensions over Greenland and significant geopolitical stress. That environment drove pronounced weakness in the US Dollar against nearly all major currencies. The key question now is whether that core theme has run its course or is simply pausing.
US Dollar Stability and Eurozone Concerns
Given that recent US inflation data for December 2025 came in at a stubborn 3.1%, the Federal Reserve is unlikely to signal any rate cuts soon, providing a floor for the dollar. This is a sharp contrast to the aggressive dollar selling we saw in 2025. Derivative traders should therefore be cautious about positioning for continued dollar weakness and might consider using options to protect against a reversal.
The euro’s rally to above 1.1700 last year was impressive, but the landscape is shifting. Last week’s flash Eurozone manufacturing PMI dropped to 43.5, signaling a deepening contraction that could force the European Central Bank to adopt a more dovish stance than the Fed. This divergence suggests that selling EUR/USD futures or buying puts on the pair could be a viable strategy in the coming weeks.
Gold’s incredible surge to a record above $4,700 an ounce was a direct result of last year’s trade war fears. Historically, such massive geopolitical risk premiums tend to fade once the immediate threat recedes, as we saw after the initial shocks of 2008 and 2020. With tensions now appearing more stable, we see traders selling out-of-the-money call options to collect premium, betting that such extreme highs won’t be tested again soon.
The market’s memory of last year’s turmoil means implied volatility remains elevated, with the VIX index holding above 18. The slight dip in Spain’s 9-month bond auction yield shows a continued, albeit stable, demand for safe assets. We believe buying protective put options on major equity indices remains a prudent way to hedge against any sudden return of the instability we witnessed throughout 2025.