DFG Navigator Archives | January 2026
Your Capital Markets Snapshot: Markets Stay Resilient Despite Global Headlines
Last week, capital markets displayed notable resilience in the face of nonstop geopolitical drama and political headlines. Investors largely looked through events such rising tensions abroad, questions about the Fed’s independence, and aggressive affordability initiatives, focusing instead on stable macro fundamentals. Equity markets continued to benefit from broadening leadership, with small- and mid-cap equities and international markets outperforming traditional mega-cap growth exposure. Inflation data remained stable, extending the trend of moderating price pressures, and economic reports showed strong consumer spending, low layoffs, and upbeat GDP estimates. Corporate earnings trends remain constructive, with expectations for a tenth consecutive quarter of year-over-year profit growth led by strength across all eleven S&P 500 sectors. Fixed income markets saw yields drift modestly higher, driven in part by speculation over the next Federal Reserve Chair and persistent strength in economic data. Meanwhile, commodity markets reflected ample global supply, with crude prices remaining near five-year lows despite geopolitical risks. Altogether, the week reinforced a consistent theme: fundamentals—not headlines—continue to drive markets forward. Read more … Your Capital Markets Snapshot: Markets Stay Resilient Despite Global Headlines
Your Capital Markets Snapshot: Early-Year Market Trends Take Shape
The start of 2026 was marked by significant geopolitical, economic, and policy events. U.S. military action in Venezuela and the capture of its leader raised questions about long-term oil supply and global precedents. U.S. labor-market data showed a continued slowdown, with December job gains below expectations and downward revisions to prior months, but the unemployment rate remained steady at 4.4%. Bond market prices suggest expectations for the Federal Reserve to proceed cautiously in 2026, with potential for one or two rate cuts during the year, as inflation remains above target but is not showing signs of reaccelerating. The Supreme Court is poised to rule on the legality of recent tariffs in the coming weeks, but any market impact could be limited due to alternative tariff mechanisms available to the administration and the relatively small scale of potential refunds relative to US GDP. Equity markets rallied, with the S&P 500 and Dow hitting record highs and small cap stocks outperforming, reflecting broadening market participation beyond mega-cap tech. Overall, markets remain focused on earnings growth and economic resilience, there is potential for short-term volatility around the upcoming inflation and Q4 earnings reports. Read more … Your Capital Markets Snapshot: Early-Year Market Trends Take Shape
Your Capital Markets Snapshot: Markets Ease to Start 2026 as Rate-Cut Expectations Shift
US equity markets opened 2026 with the S&P 500 retreating from its prior week’s all-time high. Trading volumes were light as 2025 concluded, and the modest pullback could be partly explained by year-end tax-loss selling and a drift higher in longer-term Treasury yields. The release of December FOMC minutes showed heightened disagreement among Fed officials, which contributed to reduced market expectations for near-term rate cuts. Current market probabilities suggest the April Fed meeting as the earliest a rate cut is likely to occur. Labor market data remained tight, with initial jobless claims falling and continuing claims easing. Market breadth weakened across major U.S. indices, reflecting narrower participation. Meanwhile, leadership came from select technology names, particularly semiconductor and AI infrastructure companies, while mega-cap tech was mixed. Overall, US markets ended the week lower, with the S&P 500, Dow Jones, and Nasdaq all logging roughly 1% declines to close out 2025 and begin the new year. Read more … Your Capital Markets Snapshot: Markets Ease to Start 2026 as Rate-Cut Expectations Shift