News

Between a Greenland rock and a JGB hard place.

Posted on: Jan 21 2026

Two big hurdles for the bulls here.

Listen to the full episode now or follow the Saxo Market Call on your favorite podcast app.

Today’s Links

This article is absurd, right? Surprised to see WSJ printing a scenario involving a US invasion of Greenland. The idea of military confrontation on Greenland seems farfetched, but some of the global fallouts from a dissolved NATO are worth considering if that is where we are headed on a longer term time frame, even if we avoid the specific Greenland scenario in the article.

A great bear. A great voice of sanity and morality in a crazy world, Carson Block is a guest on Adam Taggart’s Thoughtful Money, talking everything from the difficult art of short selling in modern markets, whether a Mag7 short is a good idea, observations on international markets and more.

Time hasn’t always been what it is now. Philosophical article on the way we experience time - mind-bending and worth some downtime to think about. Love it.

AI coming for all media? In that case it’s been nice knowing you… I suspect there is a ways to go for humans just yet - certainly hope so. We’re the ones that have been training the AI, after all.

Chart of the Day - JPY and JGB’s

Below is what a devaluation of a country’s currency and its public debt (the same thing, often) look like. Consider your return as a US-based investor in that JGB over the last several years - falling from 95 to 38 and the currency falling by a third as well. After this latest steep sell-off in JGB’s, the next and very large policy move is incoming to halt the slide - will it succeed? Anything that prompts mass redirection of capital back to Japan is a liquidity draw on the rest of the world, regardless.

Source: Bloomberg

Questions and comments, please!

We invite you to send any questions and comments you might have for the podcast team. Whether feedback on the show's content, questions about specific topics, or requests for more focus on a given market area in an upcoming podcast, please get in touch at [email protected].
This content is marketing material and should not be considered investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee for future performance. The instrument(s) mentioned in this content may be issued by a partner, from which Saxo receives promotion, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo receives compensation from these partnerships, all content is conducted with the intention of providing clients with valuable options and information.
Saxo Market Call
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Topics: Podcast Highlighted articles Forex
Expandarama! New Zealand services PMI December 2025: 51.5 (prior 47.2)

Posted on: Jan 20 2026

New Zealand’s services sector has emerged from a prolonged slump, adding to signs that domestic growth momentum is rebuilding into 2026.

Summary:

  • Services sector expanded for the first time since February 2024

  • PSI rose to 51.5, a 4.3-point lift from November

  • New orders and activity drove the improvement

  • Employment remained in mild contraction

  • Combined with PMI, data point to firmer late-2025 growth

  • Composite PMI in December 53.7 (prior 48.8)

New Zealand’s services sector moved back into expansion territory in December for the first time since early 2024, offering a tentative but meaningful signal that domestic activity is stabilising. The latest BNZ – BusinessNZ Performance of Services Index (PSI) rose to 51.5 in December, up sharply from November and above the 50.0 threshold that separates contraction from expansion.

While the headline improvement is encouraging, the index remains below its long-run average of 52.8, underscoring that momentum is still modest. Even so, December’s reading marked the end of the longest sustained downturn in the services sector since the survey began, with contraction persisting for 21 consecutive months.

Details within the report point to a broadening, albeit uneven, recovery. Three of the five sub-indices moved into expansion. New Orders and Business Activity led the improvement, climbing to 52.5 after four months of contraction, while Activity/Sales followed closely at 52.2. Stocks and Inventories also edged higher into expansion at 51.9, suggesting firms are beginning to prepare for improved demand conditions.

Labour market dynamics, however, remain a clear constraint. The Employment sub-index stayed in contraction at 49.6, highlighting ongoing caution among firms when it comes to hiring, despite improved activity indicators.

Sentiment measures continue to reflect lingering challenges. Just over half of respondents reported negative conditions, though this proportion eased compared with previous months. Firms cited weak demand, subdued confidence, and elevated living and operating costs as persistent headwinds, alongside seasonal disruptions linked to Christmas shutdowns.

More positively, businesses also pointed to seasonal summer demand, improving consumer confidence as interest rates fall, stronger tourism flows, and new contracts as emerging supports. BNZ economists noted that when the PSI rebound is combined with the recent surge in manufacturing activity, the data signal firmer GDP growth into the end of 2025 and improving momentum heading into the new year.

The rebound in services activity, alongside a strong manufacturing PMI, supports a more constructive near-term growth outlook for New Zealand and reduces downside GDP risks into early 2026.

This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
JP 225 forecast: the index has updated its all-time high

Posted on: Jan 16 2026

The JP 225 stock index has continued its upward momentum. The JP 225 forecast for today is negative.

JP 225 forecast: key takeaways

  • Recent data: Japan’s current account reached 3.67 trillion JPY
  • Market impact: the effect for the Japanese equity market is moderately positive

JP 225 fundamental analysis

Japan’s current account balance exceeded expectations, posting a surplus of 3.674 trillion JPY, above the forecast of 3.594 trillion JPY and the previous reading of 2.834 trillion JPY. For the equity market, this primarily signals a stronger external position and higher net income inflows from abroad, which fundamentally supports economic resilience and reduces sensitivity to external shocks. For Japanese equities, the impact of a potentially stronger yen is mixed. A stronger yen reduces the value of overseas revenues when converted into yen and may pressure the profits of export-oriented companies, while also weakening their price competitiveness in global markets. At the same time, yen appreciation lowers the cost of imported energy and raw materials.

For the JP 225 index, this release often has a moderately restraining effect in the short term, as the index structure is traditionally more sensitive to yen movements due to the significant weight of export-oriented corporations. If the market reacts to the data with yen strengthening, this would act as a direct headwind for the index. It is also worth noting that the current account figure is published without seasonal adjustment and can be volatile.

Japan’s current account: https://tradingeconomics.com/japan/current-account

JP 225 technical analysis

The JP 225 index is trading within an uptrend, with the support zone at 51,150.0 and the nearest resistance level around 54,180.0. The current trend is likely to be medium-term. The next potential upside target is the 55,270.0 area.

The JP 225 price forecast considers the following scenarios:

  • Pessimistic JP 225 scenario: a breakout below the 51,180.0 support level could push the index down to 49,705.0
  • Optimistic JP 225 scenario: a breakout above the 54,180.0 resistance level could boost the index up to 55,270.0
JP 225 technical analysis for 15 January 2026

Summary

A higher-than-expected current account surplus in Japan is fundamentally a positive macroeconomic signal. However, for the JP 225, the key short-term driver will be the movement of the yen. If the yen strengthens, the effect on the index is likely to be neutral to moderately negative, with relatively better performance from companies focused on the domestic market. The next upside target for the JP 225 is 55,270.0.

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investingLive Americas market news wrap: Nonfarm payrolls a touch soft, no tariff decision

Posted on: Jan 10 2026

  • US December non-farm payrolls +50K vs +60K expected
  • Canada employment change 8.2K versus -5.0 K estimate
  • Japan's Takaichi weighs calling a snap election for mid-February
  • US October housing starts 1.246m vs 1.325m expected
  • Fed's Barkin: Today's drop in the unemployment rate is welcome
  • Fed's Bostic says inflation is 'a lot' above the 2% target
  • No opinion today on tariffs from the US Supreme Court
  • How Trump leaked the non-farm payrolls report
  • White House says Trump jobs report leak was "inadvertent public disclosure"
  • US UMich January prelim consumer sentiment 54.0 vs 53.5 expected
  • The US earnings calendar heats up next week with banks and airlines

Markets:

  • Gold up $28 to $4503
  • Silver up 3.8%
  • WTI crude up $1.20 to $58.97
  • US 10-year yields flat at 4.17%
  • S&P 500 up 0.8% to fresh record
  • USD leads, JPY lags

It was a lively news day but not as much as it could have been. The Supreme Court released a decision on Friday as expected but it wasn't about tariffs, so we will continue to wait for that. The next possible date is Wednesday, which has also been scheduled as a 'decision day'.

In terms of what happened, the non-farm payrolls report led to volatile trading. The dollar rose on the kneejerk, then fell around 25 pips due to the softer headline and revisions, then started a long climb as the market focused on the lower unemployment rate. That view was validated by Barkin, who said he welcomed falling unemployment.

Overall, the US dollar moves weren't big.

The loonie didn't get any help from a strong jobs report as USD/CAD rose for the six straight day to start the year. That pair is now at a five week high, even as oil prices rise. Part of the reason is compressing Canadian heavy oil spreads after the US-Venezuela coup.

The big loser on the day was the yen and most of that came before the election reports but I think that's a critical spot to watch. If Takaichi launches a campaign and promises even more spending, that could turbocharge worries about Japanese indebtedness and further boost long-term borrowing costs. She's polling well so it shouldn't be a surprise if she decides to pull the trigger.

A bid for precious metals came midway through US trading and I wonder if the market is sensing weekend risk after the drama in Venezuela. It seems as though Cuba is on the clock and maybe Greenland too. Further, keep an eye on Iran this weekend as protests there likely lifted gold and oil prices in Friday.

Have a great weekend.

This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
Venezuela is probably just the start. Market shrugs, though US oil majors cheer.

Posted on: Jan 06 2026

The Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine is now officially a thing.

Listen to the full episode now or follow the Saxo Market Call on your favorite podcast app.

Today’s Links

I forgot to mention this one on the podcast today - an article pointing out the important differences in the Waymo versus Tesla approach to autonomous driving, possibly suggesting that Tesla’s approach is the superior one (not in the sensors, but in the AI approach). I have often poked fun at the Tesla self-driving effort (at least relative to that of others and to how the market is pricing it, though I try to stay somewhat objective and have also discussed the maths of self-driving vehicle earnings, which are pretty compelling if they can be scaled, but more importantly, if competition isn’t brutal and means it becomes commodified.)

Tracy Shuchart, aka Chigirl with a long Substack on the reasons behind the US regime change operation in Venezuela, covering as well the possible rare earth angle that I hadn’t seen covered elsewhere yet.

And here is Michael McNair weighing in on the Cuba angle as Cuba faces an energy crisis within weeks due to is now former dependence on Venezuelan imports.

That “silver smelter” story (HT: MichaelEvery)  I discussed on today's pod is yet another example of the US Department of Defense moving to secure critical materials - in this case zinc - and with the National Bank of the USA, uh… JP Morgan… involved in the financing.

Chart of the Day - Prior knowledge is a wonderful thing….

As noted on today’s pod, it was very interesting to note that massive ramp in oil-services companies, particularly SLB on Friday amidst a lack of news (chart below - formerly Schlumberger, which is what I called it on the podcast). With 20-20 hindsight, this raises strong suspicion of insider knowledge. With the SEC on a permanent lite touch holiday, this kind of thing might be something that operators in the market can use to suss out signals for advance knowledge that something is afoot for a given company or sector or the market at large. Anyway, my little ChatGPT query after the Saturday Venezuelan regime decapitation move on SLB/Schlumberger’s past and current activities in Venezuela revealed the following nuggets: 1) It used to be one of the company’s “flagship” countries, having operated there since the 1930’s. 2) By the early 2020’s, the company’s operations there had essentially collapsed, with mothballed assets and merely an office to maintain a presence. If US oil companies do eventually go full throttle in reinvesting in the country, based on historic presence and the expertise for specific fields, SLB looks like it is first in line of the services majors for significant contracts. The shares are up another 9% pre-market today.

 

Source: Saxo

Questions and comments, please!

We invite you to send any questions and comments you might have for the podcast team. Whether feedback on the show's content, questions about specific topics, or requests for more focus on a given market area in an upcoming podcast, please get in touch at [email protected].
This content is marketing material and should not be considered investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee for future performance. The instrument(s) mentioned in this content may be issued by a partner, from which Saxo receives promotion, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo receives compensation from these partnerships, all content is conducted with the intention of providing clients with valuable options and information.
Saxo Market Call
Saxo Bank
Topics: Podcast Highlighted articles Forex