It’s been a long, holiday-shortened week of trading with the first, short-lived, gut check of 2026. Over the weekend President Trump broke out the trade war playbook again souring the mood in Davos ahead of the World Economic Forum but on a lighter note there was plenty of entertaining playoff football. That was capped off on Monday night with the Indiana Hoosiers winning their first National Championship, and the third straight for the Big 10 Conference (I thought this was my year instead it’s a full-fledged rebuild). After a late night of football, US markets paid homage to that victory with a deep sea of red on Tuesday as traders returned to their stations.
The headline blamed for much of that weakness was President Trump’s threat to enact 10% tariffs, potentially moving to 25%, against European countries that didn’t go along with his plans to acquire Greenland. The Greenland headlines captured a lot of the attention but the other factor driving the weakness was a surge in long dated yields in Japan amidst concerns related to consumption tax cuts and increased fiscal spending ahead of snap elections in early February. This pushed global yields higher with the long end of the Treasury curve breaking above some key technical levels and hitting the highest level since the summer.
On Tuesday US equity markets closed sharply lower. The S&P 500 fell <2%, the biggest one-day decline since October with the index breaking below its 50d moving average and giving up all of the YTD gains. The losses were broad based, but mega-cap tech bore the brunt of the selling while there was some outperformance in defensive sectors like consumer staples, healthcare and energy with the looming geopolitical risks. Declines in small and mid-cap indices were a little more subdued. Markets closed near session lows with President Trump’s Davos address scheduled before the open on Wednesday.
There was a tepid bounce in futures overnight, but those gains had evaporated before President Trump approached the podium. The speech was rather long and included something for everyone: a victory lap of his accomplishments in his first year of office, plans for his big Golden Dome, a review of Europe’s socioeconomic situation, mentions of Denmark’s short appearance in WWII, NATO, French President Macron’s sunglasses, which for the record were pretty cool and even projections for election results if he ran against the pairing of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. As you can tell it was a wide-ranging speech but the headline that caught the market’s attention was when he said he wouldn’t take over Greenland with the “excessive force”. This “sort of” olive branch helped equities bounce back at the open.
Those gains faded during the session before President Trump appeared on the airwaves again saying a framework for deal involving Greenland had been worked out after a meeting with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte and proceeded to cancel the previously threatened tariffs. This quick about face helped equities bounce back, recouping pretty much all of the losses to start the week with small and midcap indices, hitting new all-time highs. Details of the framework remain scant.
If the MAC Desk were geopolitical strategic bankers, which we are clearly not, before another activist investor gets involved, we’d push Denmark to announce that they are exploring “strategic alternatives” which could include a tax-free spinoff of Greenland or an outright sale. That could lead to a bidding war that accrues significant value to stakeholders and unlock value that is not being rewarded by the market currently. We think the US would be in a strong position to be a stalking horse bidder in such a process. And if nothing else Denmark should check in with the Dodgers before signing any deal. The only thing their roster is missing is an arctic territory. As legendary WWF Wrestler Ted DiBiase aka “The Million Dollar Man” said, “Everyone has a price.”