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Fri, 30 Jan 2026 16:00:00 +0000 No Death Penalty For Luigi Mangine, Biden Judge Rules
No Death Penalty For Luigi Mangine, Biden Judge Rules
A federal district judge in New York has ruled that Luigi Mangione, 27, will not face the death penalty for allegedly killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson
Read more.....
No Death Penalty For Luigi Mangine, Biden Judge Rules
A federal district judge in New York has ruled that Luigi Mangione, 27, will not face the death penalty for allegedly killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in December 2024.
Luigi Mangione appears in Manhattan Criminal Court on December 18, 2025 (Curtis Means / Pool / Getty Images)
The ruling by Judge Margaret Garnett (Biden) is a loss for federal prosecutors, who were pursuing the death penalty in the case.
Garnett also ruled that evidence recovered from Mangione's backpack is admissible as evidence. Law enforcement seized various items from the backpack - including a handgun, a loaded magazine, and a red notebook, which authorities say tie him to the killing.
Mangione's attorneys had asked that the evidence be barred from trial, arguing that the search of his backpack was illegal because they had not obtained a warrant, and there was no immediate threat that justified a warrantless search.
Surveillance cameras recorded the slaying, as video shows Thompson walking down the sidewalk outside a hotel when a man approaches from behind and opens fire. Thompson suffered multiple gunshot wounds and collapsed to the ground, after which the gunman fled and was later spotted on a bike making his way uptown. There was at least one eyewitness.
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson (AP Photo/ UNH)
Mangione was arrested five days later at a McDonald's in Atloona, Pennsylvania, after customers and staff recognized him from a wanted poster.
The defense has aggressively argued that prosecutors have failed to allege an underlying "crime of violence" necessary for the top charge of murder with a firearm. Prosecutors countered , arguing in an opposition filing that the defense is relying on an irrelevant precedent.
"Here, by contrast, no court has interpreted the 'conduct that places [the victim] in reasonable fear of death or serious bodily injury' element ," federal prosecutors wrote.
To charge Mangione with murder through the use of a firearm, prosecutors need to prove an underlying crime of violence. They have alleged this to be stalking , however legal analysts have suggested that stalking can be done without violence.
"It’s like a series of dominos — the only way that the federal government can get to a death penalty charge in their case is if the murder was committed during the course of a violent felony," LA criminal defense attorney Joshua Ritter previously told Fox News . "And the reason that they need that is because they need what’s called a federal hook to get them federal jurisdiction."
Jury selection in the case is scheduled for Sept. 8, and a trial will follow in either October or January. Prosecutors have requested a July 1 start date.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 01/30/2026 - 11:00 Close
Fri, 30 Jan 2026 15:25:00 +0000 The Market Is Responding To Warsh's Nomination, But Nothing Has Changed
The Market Is Responding To Warsh's Nomination, But Nothing Has Changed
By Bas van Geffen, Senior Market Strategist at Rabobank
When the Fed decided to hold rates unchanged last Wednesday, Waller was one of the two
Read more.....
The Market Is Responding To Warsh's Nomination, But Nothing Has Changed
By Bas van Geffen, Senior Market Strategist at Rabobank
When the Fed decided to hold rates unchanged last Wednesday, Waller was one of the two dissenters in favour of another rate cut. Waller’s dissenting vote may have kept him on President Trump’s list of potential Fed chairs, but it now seems that it did not get him to the top of that list. Reportedly, Trump is ready to announce Kevin Warsh as his nominee (ZH: Trump officially nominated him this morning). .
The dollar has regained some strength. Perhaps that’s thanks to Warsh’ credentials as a former monetary policy hawk – prioritizing inflation control and favouring a smaller Fed balance sheet. However, let’s not forget that President Trump’s first selection criterion is whether the candidates are willing to pursue lower interest rates. So, if he does nominate Warsh later today, he is unlikely to be as hawkish as he once was – unless he has hidden that very well in his interviews with the president. Indeed, Warsh has recently also called for rate cuts.
Nonetheless, compared to the other candidates, Warsh is certainly more on the hawkish side of the spectrum. And so, most asset classes wavered. Treasury yields opened the day higher, and equities slid, with Chinese markets down 1% on the day. The record-breaking streaks in gold and silver have also ended – at least for now. The precious metals are currently down about 8% and 12% from their peaks, respectively. And that is despite concerns over a potential escalation in the Persian Gulf.
The retracements are notable, but we wouldn’t say that the debasement trade or diversification from the US have now stopped . The market may respond optimistically to the prospect of Warsh’ nomination, but broader US policy uncertainty is still not doing the dollar any favours.
Likewise, the US’ attitude towards other countries, is even starting to drive traditional allies away from the US. The European Union has accelerated trade deals with various other economies, and the signing of an accord with India earlier this week is a key step in the EU’s effort to diversify away its economic and geopolitical dependencies.
With a 99.5% reduction of tariffs on imports from India, it creates significant opportunities for India’s (labor) intensive export sectors. That may also help Europe, as it is facing a major acceleration in ageing in the coming decades. But it will also create more opportunities for European businesses to diversify their operations out of China and into India. That is the strategic value in that deal.
And the United Kingdom is pursuing closer ties with China. This week, Starmer became the first prime minister to visit China in eight years, where he met with president Xi. The visit thawed some of the relations between the two countries. China agreed to waive visa requirements for UK visitors. Amongst the results is a “services partnership” that should give the UK better access to the Chinese market. It’s a first step towards a potential bilateral trade deal on services, which both sides have agreed to explore.
The UK’s rapprochement to China drew criticism from Trump. The US president said it is “very dangerous” that the UK government is trying to get closer to China. The UK could therefore come into Trump’s crosshairs again, just like the US president threatened new tariffs on Canada over its recent trade deal with China. However, as we noted above, its precisely these kinds of threats that have encouraged the UK and Canada to seek alternatives to the US.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 01/30/2026 - 10:25 Close
Fri, 30 Jan 2026 15:05:00 +0000 Iran Ready To Resume Nuclear Talks With US, Prepared For 'War Or Diplomacy'
Iran Ready To Resume Nuclear Talks With US, Prepared For 'War Or Diplomacy'
At the Thursday night world premier for "Melania," President Trump told reporters on the red carpet in response to an Iran question: "We have a lot
Read more.....
Iran Ready To Resume Nuclear Talks With US, Prepared For 'War Or Diplomacy'
At the Thursday night world premier for "Melania," President Trump told reporters on the red carpet in response to an Iran question: "We have a lot of very big, very powerful ships sailing to Iran right now . And it would be great if we didn't have to use them. I told them two things; Number one no nuclear. And number two stop killing protesters. ... They're going to have to do something."
Iranian Foreign Minister Araghchi has on Friday while in Turkey said that his country is ready to engage in negotiations on the nuclear front , as long as they are fair and good-faith. "The United States has repeatedly requested negotiations with us through various intermediaries and continues to renew these requests. We have no problem with engaging in negotiations ," he said .
He then emphasized, "However, negotiations cannot begin with threats. They must set aside their threats." He noted too that the "US has never been loyal ... it hasn't shown good intentions, but despite this , Iran remains ready for all diplomatic processes ."
via AFP
This is no doubt a reference to the US unilaterally pulling out of the first JCPOA nuclear deal in 2018; and much more recently the US-Iran dialogue that took place right up to the eve of Washington secretly greenlighting the June Israeli attack on Tehran. Iran thought it was holding good faith talks, but was duped.
A main serious obstacle which stands in the way of potential fresh negotiations is that President Trump has also been talking about Iran reducing or getting rid of its ballistic missile arsenal .
According to the latest on Iran's expressed position :
Araghchi said he discussed with Fidan the possible venue and agenda for talks with the Trump administration. "I hope we can soon reach a clear framework that can guarantee dignified negotiations," Araghchi said.
"We need to see the conditions and the agenda first," Araghchi said, adding that any negotiations need to be "fair and equitable."
He stressed that Iran will not negotiate over its ballistic missile program and said Iran is ready for both scenarios — war or diplomacy .
Currently, Trump officials are reportedly insisting that Iran be stripped of any missile range capable of striking Israel. Israel, meanwhile, would retain its full missile arsenal - including the undeclared nuclear weapons that everyone in the world knows about - capable of hitting Iran. According to CNN :
The biggest sticking point , sources said, has been the US demand that Iran agree to put limits on the range of its ballistic missiles — an acute concern for Israel, which expended much of its missile interceptor stockpile shooting down Iranian ballistic missiles during last June’s 12-day war. Iran has balked at that and told the US it would only discuss its nuclear program . The US has not replied, leaving both sides at a dead end, the sources said.
Which leaves the so-called "sticking point" glaringly obvious: Washington is demanding that Tehran agree to unilateral disarmament, rendering itself defenseless against Israeli air and missile strikes . In other words, total capitulation - or else .
And about that supposedly "obliterated" Iranian nuclear program ?
It’s not clear why Trump has since shifted his focus back to Iran’s nuclear program, which he said last summer had been “obliterated” by US strikes . But Iran has been trying to rebuild its nuclear sites even deeper underground, according to a person familiar with recent US intelligence on the issue, and has long resisted US pressure to halt its uranium enrichment. The regime has also barred the UN’s nuclear watchdog from inspecting its nuclear sites.
Like with Venezuela before - or even hearkening all the way back to Bush's Iraq invasion - the justifications for war will keep on shifting, until something sticks in a thinly veiled effort to manufacture consent.
On these negotiation demands, offers, and counter-offers - we've all seen this movie before. It's been a rinse and repeat kind of thing , and Iranian leaders know this better than anyone.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 01/30/2026 - 10:05 Close
Fri, 30 Jan 2026 14:45:00 +0000 Ilhan Omar Brutally Mocked For Response When Asked About 'Staged' Skirmish
Ilhan Omar Brutally Mocked For Response When Asked About 'Staged' Skirmish
Ilhan Omar Brutally Mocked For Response When Asked About 'Staged' Skirmish
Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,
Extremist Somali Democrat Ilhan Omar faced relentless mockery Thursday after being asked why she reacted so oddly when she was sprayed with an unknown substance by a weirdo at a town hall event earlier this week.
Omar was spewing her usual anti-American nonsense when she glanced up at a fidgety creepy guy sitting in the front row, who then proceeded to stand up and start yelling at her before spraying what turned out to be apple cider vinegar at her from a water bottle.
The entire world immediately declared the incident a badly staged hoax designed to illicit sympathy for Omar and distract from investigations into her sudden vast wealth that seems to have come from nowhere.
One factor that convinced many the incident was manufactured was Omar’s odd response, choosing to approach the guy as he was being detained, and then just return to her podium, seemingly unconcerned about the liquid he just projected at her.
The post continues:
… skin and eyes with running water for 15 minutes
• Wash with soap and water
• Seek medical attention right away
• Call Poison Control for guidance: 1-800-222-1222
You didn’t do anything on this list because it was staged.
Omar responded in her usual venomous fashion:
Dignity? What dignity?
Brutal!
And who exactly is she calling “coward losers”?
This is who she is.
Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch . Follow us on X @ModernityNews .
Tyler Durden
Fri, 01/30/2026 - 09:45 Close
Fri, 30 Jan 2026 14:25:00 +0000 Don Lemon Arrested By Federal Authorities Over Minnesota Church Protest
Don Lemon Arrested By Federal Authorities Over Minnesota Church Protest
Former CNN anchor Don Lemon was arrested by federal authorities late Thursday night on charges that he violated federal law when he entered the
Read more.....
Don Lemon Arrested By Federal Authorities Over Minnesota Church Protest
Former CNN anchor Don Lemon was arrested by federal authorities late Thursday night on charges that he violated federal law when he entered the Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota and shoved a microphone in people's faces to livestream reactions after activists stormed the church on Jan. 18.
The protesters, chanting "ICE Out!" - interrupted services because one of its pastors is also an official with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Lemon originally faced charges related to allegedly violating federal laws protecting religious exercise/houses of worship (e.g., the FACE Act or 18 U.S.C. § 241 conspiracy to deprive civil rights) by interfering with the church service.
Lemon's attorney, Abbe Lowell, said his client was taken into custody by federal agents Thursday night in Los Angeles while he was covering the Grammy awards. He is expected to make his first court appearance there.
Lemon insists that while he was tipped off ahead of time about the demonstration, he did not know they would disrupt the service.
"Don has been a journalist for 30 years, and his constitutionally protected work in Minneapolis was no different than what he has always done," said Lowell. "The First Amendment exists to protect journalists whose role it is to shine light on the truth and hold those in power accountable."
The DOJ originally sought to charge eight people over the incident, including Lemon, citing a law that protects people seeking to participate in a service in a house of worship - however a magistrate judge whose wife reportedly works in AG Keith Ellison's office only approved charges against three people , rejecting the evidence against Lemon and others as insufficient.
Despite the denials, a federal grand jury returned an indictment against Lemon. Looks like the party is over, for now.
VIDEO
Tyler Durden
Fri, 01/30/2026 - 09:25 Close
Fri, 30 Jan 2026 14:00:00 +0000 "Ready For De-Escalation": Zelensky Ready To Accept Energy Ceasefire If Putin Will
"Ready For De-Escalation": Zelensky Ready To Accept Energy Ceasefire If Putin Will
Shortly after President Donald Trump said Thursday afternoon that Russia had agreed to Read more.....
"Ready For De-Escalation": Zelensky Ready To Accept Energy Ceasefire If Putin Will
Shortly after President Donald Trump said Thursday afternoon that Russia had agreed to pause strikes on Kiev and other Ukrainian cities for a week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said overnight that Ukraine is prepared to halt drone and missile attacks on Russia's critical energy infrastructure, provided Putin honors a weeklong truce and refrains from launching missiles or drones at Kiev.
"If Russia does not strike our energy infrastructure — generation facilities or any other energy assets — we will not strike theirs," Zelensky told reporters in Kiev. "We want to end the war and we are ready for de-escalation steps."
Temperatures in Kiev are absolutely freezing. Large swaths of the metro area are without power after Russia targeted thermal power plants and other critical infrastructure. The government (or perhaps US taxpayers) has provided generators to businesses and some residents. At night, much of Kiev is plunged into darkness, but in areas with power, generators hum through the night.
On Thursday, Trump told reporters, "Because of the extreme cold…I personally asked President Putin not to fire on Kiev and the cities and towns for a week."
According to Trump, Putin "agreed to do that," adding that "we're very happy" with the outcome.
The claim comes amid growing speculation about behind-the-scenes de-escalation talks. Earlier in the day, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to comment on reports suggesting Moscow and Kiev had agreed to a so-called "energy ceasefire."
Early in the Trump administration, there had been perhaps a few weeks of such an energy ceasefire, where strikes seemed minimal and limited - but it ultimately failed to stick or take off. Ukraine has not acknowledged any such fresh energy ceasefire.
It was only on Wednesday that Russian drones struck Kiev and the surrounding region, killing two people and injuring others, and damaging a residential building.
Residents and a local journalist we spoke with are not entirely optimistic about the proposed energy ceasefire. The good news is that the widely followed "Air Alert!" system, which warns people when to shelter from incoming air threats, has issued no notifications in the last 24 hours for Kiev.
The energy ceasefire, however temporary, risks becoming a tactical pause rather than a true de-escalation: it gives both sides time to replenish and stockpile loitering munitions and missiles, raising the possibility that once the truce breaks, Russia could resume and even intensify bombardment of Kiev.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 01/30/2026 - 09:00 Close
Fri, 30 Jan 2026 13:44:40 +0000 US Producer Prices Unexpectedly Surged In December
US Producer Prices Unexpectedly Surged In December
US Producer Prices Unexpectedly Surged In December
Following the cooler than expected Consumer Price Inflation , Producer Prices came in considerably hotter than expected at the headline level in December. PPI rose 0.5% MoM (vs +0.2% MoM exp), lifting headline PPI to +3.0% YoY.
Source: Bloomberg
Services costs dominated the rise in the headline PPI (not Goods - which would be affected by tariffs).
Source: Bloomberg
Final demand services: The index for final demand services advanced 0.7 percent in December, the largest increase since moving up 0.9 percent in July. Two-thirds of the broad-based December rise in prices for final demand services can be traced to a 1.7-percent jump in margins for final demand trade services. (Trade indexes measure changes in margins received by wholesalers and retailers.) The indexes for final demand services less trade, transportation, and warehousing and for final demand transportation and warehousing services also moved up, 0.3 percent and 0.5 percent, respectively.
Product detail: Over 40 percent of the December increase in prices for final demand services can be traced to a 4.5-percent rise in margins for machinery and equipment wholesaling. The indexes for guestroom rental; food and alcohol retailing; health, beauty, and optical goods retailing; portfolio management; and airline passenger services also advanced. Conversely, prices for bundled wired telecommunications access services fell 4.4 percent. The indexes for automotive fuels and lubricants retailing and for long-distance motor carrying also moved lower.
Services costs jumped as a measure of trade profit margins surged by the most since mid-2024.
Source: Bloomberg
Final demand goods: Prices for final demand goods were unchanged in December following a 0.8-percent increase in November. In December, a 0.4-percent advance in the index for final demand goods less foods and energy offset declines in prices for final demand energy and for final demand foods, which fell 1.4 percent and 0.3 percent, respectively.
Product detail: Within final demand goods in December, the index for nonferrous metals moved up 4.5 percent. Prices for residential natural gas, motor vehicles, soft drinks, and aircraft and aircraft equipment also increased. In contrast, the index for diesel fuel dropped 14.6 percent. Prices for gasoline, jet fuel, beef and veal, and iron and steel scrap also decreased.
Source: Bloomberg
Interestingly, PPI Energy costs dipped (as did CPI), but remain notably elevated from six months ago, despite the price of energy actually being dramatically lower.
Source: Bloomberg
The problem for the incoming Fed Chair is though, as the chart shows, energy costs have started to rise rapidly since the last macro data.
Core PPI (ex Food and Energy) surged even more - up 0.7% MoM (vs +0.2% MoM exp), pulling the core up 3.3% YoY...
Source: Bloomberg
That is the biggest MoM jump since July 2025 (and second biggest MoM jump since March 2022) and the YoY figure is inflecting higher.
While elevated relative to the Fed's mandate, there remains no sign of the runaway tariff hyperinflation that Democrats had 'priced in' to their survey responses (and establishment economists were convinced were imminent).
Tyler Durden
Fri, 01/30/2026 - 08:44 Close
Fri, 30 Jan 2026 13:41:10 +0000 Stocks Slide, Gold And Bitcoin Tumble After Trump Taps Warsh As Next Fed Chair
Stocks Slide, Gold And Bitcoin Tumble After Trump Taps Warsh As Next Fed Chair
US futures slumped, the dollar rallied sharply, the Treasury curve steepened with 10Y yield rising as high as 4.28% and gold and bitcoin tumbled on what
Read more.....
Stocks Slide, Gold And Bitcoin Tumble After Trump Taps Warsh As Next Fed Chair
US futures slumped, the dollar rallied sharply, the Treasury curve steepened with 10Y yield rising as high as 4.28% and gold and bitcoin tumbled on what was at first speculation and then confirmation, that President Trump is nominating Kevin Warsh - widely viewed as the most hawkish of the handful of candidates - as the next Fed chair. As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures slid 0.4% but were well off session lows double that, while Nasdaq futures dropped 0.6% as markets brush aside strong Apple results. Pre-market, almost all Mag 7 stocks are lower with META (-1.5%), GOOGL (-1.4%) and NVDA (-1.4%) the biggest laggards; TSLA added +2.0%, the only exception in Mag 7. European stocks are all green while Asian equities join in the risk exodus, with Hong Kong indexes the biggest losers. Kospi flips an early 1.9% rally to a loss before turning positive again. The US Dollar is higher to 96.62; the yield curve steepened (30y +2.8bp vs. 2y -0.6bp) on the market view that Warsh is more hawkish than Trump expects. Commodities are mostly lower: Brent futures tumbled back below $70 a barrel following a three-day rally, while precious metals tumbled - gold fell 5% to 5100, silver plunged -12% under $100 while base metals are higher. US economic calendar includes December PPI (8:30am) and January MNI Chicago PMI (9:45am). Fed speaker slate includes Miran (11:10am), Musalem (1:30pm), Miran (3pm) and Bowman (5pm).
In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are mostly lower: Apple (AAPL) slips 0.7% after the iPhone maker warned that rising component costs are threatening to squeeze margins. The company also posted its largest first-quarter sales growth in over four years, driven by strength in its closely-watched iPhone segment (Tesla +2.3%, Microsoft +0.5%, Amazon -0.7%, Nvidia -0.9%, Alphabet -0.5%, Meta -1.2%)
Precious metals miners tumble, set to extends Thursday’s losses, as gold and silver sell off heavily.
American Express (AXP) falls 3% after the payment company reported earnings per share for the fourth quarter that missed the average analyst estimate.
Charter Communications (CHTR) rises 6% after the cable operator reported a gain in pay-TV customers. Its fourth-quarter earnings also beat expectations.
Deckers Outdoor (DECK) rises 12% after the owner of the Ugg and Hoka footwear brands raised its annual earnings and sales forecast, beating the average analyst estimate. Analysts note strength in the retailer’s direct-to-consumer channels in the US.
KLA Corp. (KLAC) falls 8% after the chip company reported results for the second quarter and gave an outlook. The stock has surged 39% so far this year as of Thursday’s close.
MaxLinear (MXL) falls 14% after the semiconductor device company’s results were seen as disappointing in key business lines.
Olin (OLN) falls 8% after the maker of ammunition and chemicals said it anticipates first quarter 2026 adjusted Ebitda will be lower than fourth quarter levels.
Sandisk (SNDK) rises 24% as the computer hardware and storage company’s second-quarter revenue beat expectations. Raymond James analyst upgraded the stock to outperform from market perform.
Schneider National (SNDR) falls 19% after the trucking company reported adjusted earnings per share below Wall Street expectations.
Market conditions were softer than expected in much of the fourth quarter, creating a “very truncated peak season,” CEO Mark Rourke said.
SoFi Technologies (SOFI) rises 5% after the online lender reported net interest income and adjusted net revenue above estimates.
Stryker (SYK) gains 1% after the maker of surgical products gave forecasts for adjusted revenue and organic growth for the full year, where the midpoints of the outlook topped the average analyst estimate.
Verizon Communications (VZ) rises 1% after the telecom company’s fourth-quarter results beat expectations on key metrics, including wireless customers. It also gave an outlook that is ahead of the consensus on metrics like adjusted earnings and free cash flow.
In corporate news, US law enforcement is investigating allegations that Meta personnel can access WhatsApp messages, despite the company’s claims that the chat service is private and encrypted. SpaceX is said to be considering a potential merger with Tesla or an alternative combination with AI firm xAI. An IPO is also possible with SpaceX said to weigh a June listing, around Musk’s birthday, and could seek to raise as much as $50 billion. In other AI news, Amazon is said to be in talks to invest as much as $50 billion in OpenAI and expand an agreement that involves selling computer power to the AI startup.
US stock futures slumped as Trump nominated Kevin Warsh as Fed chair, the candidate who once was vocally in favor of shrinking the Fed's balance sheet and limiting its influence, hardly what Trump wants as he pushes the Fed to ease financial conditions aggressively.
The choice of Warsh as Trump’s nomination to be the next Federal Reserve chair is viewed as more hawkish than other contenders. Long viewed as an inflation hawk, his prospects have rippled through markets, with the dollar gaining versus all its major peers while Treasuries fell, led by the long-end as 30-year yields jumped five basis points.
“We advise against overdoing the Warsh hawkish trade across asset markets, and even see some risk of a whipsaw,” wrote Evercore ISI economists led by Krishna Guha. “We see Warsh as a pragmatist, not an ideological hawk in the tradition of the independent conservative central banker.”
Not everyone agreed: “A Fed led by Warsh is likely to pursue a more cautious, gradual approach to monetary policy rather than aggressive rate cuts,” said Dilin Wu, a research strategist at Pepperstone. “Markets that have priced in a more rapid rate cut — particularly high-valuation tech stocks — may face headwinds.”
While Apple earnings reassured tech investors after a volatile Thursday that included a Microsoft selloff that wiped out $357 billion in value, the second-largest loss for a single session in stock market history, the sentiment boost was quickly erased amid fears Warsh could soon pull the punchbowl. Apple reported the fastest year-on-year revenue growth in 16 quarters, bizarrely driven by China where it's sales had been in steady decline, and is projecting between 13% and 16% sales growth for the March quarter, the highest since March 2021. Focus on the conference call centered on costs, specifically surging memory prices, although Apple’s midpoint of gross margin guidance for fiscal 2Q at 48.5% would be higher than 1Q’s reported 48.5%.
“I see today’s fall in Nasdaq futures as a short-term move and see this as a buying opportunity, should there be a bigger fall,” said David Rainville, portfolio manager at Sycomore AM. “I don’t think that having someone slightly more hawkish than expected at the Fed is a bad thing in itself for tech on the long run.”
Memory prices remain in focus with Sandisk’s blowout guidance, with a surge in after hours trading only adding to gains that have lifted the storage and memory maker more than 1,100% over the last six months. The rally has pushed it to the top of the S&P 500 leaderboard, with the second-, third- and fourth-best performers exposed to the same dynamic.
BofA strategists warn global stocks are overbought, and the proportion of MSCI indexes above key moving averages has breached their sell-signal threshold. Some 89% of MSCI stock indexes traded above their 50-day and 200-day moving averages in the week ended Jan. 28, a Bank of America team led by Michael Hartnett wrote in a note. That breached the 88% threshold that they view as a sell signal . Inflows into US stocks resumed in the week at $9.2 billion according to BofA citing EPFR Global data. Gold had the biggest inflows since October at $6.7 billion.
Elsewhere, Trump also reached a tentative deal with Senate Democrats to avert a disruptive US government shutdown, though lawmakers are almost certain to miss the Friday night deadline to enact the measure. Oil retreated after a three-day rally as risk-off sentiment swept across broader markets, even as Trump’s escalating threats against Iran kept the market on edge.
Colgate-Palmolive, Chevron, Exxon Mobil, American Express and Verizon are among companies expected to report results before the market opens.
European shares rise Friday, supported by positive earnings news, pushing the Stoxx 600 up 0.3% to 608.98. The region’s miners are among the biggest laggards after the copper price retreated from record highs, while travel and leisure shares outperform. Here are the biggest movers Friday:
Alten shares jump as much as 19%, the most since 2002, after the technology consulting firm reported fourth-quarter revenue growth that analysts described as surprisingly strong
Electrolux shares jump as much as 22%, their biggest intraday gain on record, after the Swedish home appliances firm reported strong fourth-quarter earnings
Swatch shares gain as much as 8.1%, the most since October, as analysts note encouraging revenue trends that overshadow an operating profit miss. The Swiss watch maker also said it expects substantial growth
Adidas gains as much as 6.2%, the most since April, after the sportswear company reported preliminary fourth-quarter operating profit that beat consensus estimates and announced a share buyback program
Elis gains as much as 3.6% to trade at the highest in over two months, after the French cleaning services group delivered robust organic growth in the fourth quarter, with Southern Europe and Latin America performing strongly
Raiffeisen shares rise as much as 1.9% after the Austrian lender reported dividends per share for the full year that beat estimates and forecasted a stable return on equity excluding Russia
Signify slumps as much as 15%, the most since 2020, after the lighting specialist issued a profit warning for 2026, with adjusted Ebita margin now seen significantly below analyst expectations
SKF falls as much as 7.6%, the most since November, after the Swedish ball-bearings maker reported its latest earnings. Analysts flagged costs and tax effects related to the firm’s announced separation of its automotive arm
The Stoxx 600 Basic Resources is the worst-performing subsector on the European bourse on Friday, shedding as much as 3.8%, after copper prices sank from a record
Antofagasta declined as much as 7.1% in London, the most since July, after UBS cut the base metals miner to neutral from buy, saying the catalysts for the stock have mostly “played out”
Maersk shares fall as much as 2.9% after Nordea downgraded the Danish shipping and logistics firm to sell from hold, seeing downside risk to earnings
Billerud drops as much as 17%, hitting the lowest since February 2014, as fourth-quarter results from the Swedish paper company miss expectations on continued European weakness
Unlike Europe, Asian equities fell, led by technology stocks, as investors weighed rising costs tied to artificial intelligence and prospects for US rate cuts under a new Federal Reserve chair. The MSCI Asia Pacific index fell as much as 1.2%, with TSMC, Alibaba and Tencent among the biggest drags. Benchmarks in Hong Kong and Taiwan dropped more than 1%. Indonesian equities rebounded after a two-day market rout that led to the bourse’s chief stepping down. Investors are also watching an expected dinner hosted by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang with key supply-chain partners during his visit to Taiwan. Major earnings next week include Alphabet, Amazon.com and Toyota.
In FX, the US dollar pares of 0.6% to 0.3% as markets ponder the prospect of Kevin Warsh being appointed Fed Chair.
In rates, the US yield curve steepens on expectations he would favor a smaller balance sheet, pushing the 2- to 30-year spread wider by about 4bps. The yield on 10-year Treasuries rose one basis point to 4.25%, having earlier risen as high as 4.28%. Money markets added to bets on a rate cut in June, with two reductions priced in for 2026. JGB futures tick higher after Tokyo inflation cools more than expected and 2-year bond auction passes without drama. Australian curve a touch flatter with 10-year yield down 3 bps. German and UK 10-year yields are both up about a basis point, with Bunds digesting a stronger-than-expected fourth-quarter GDP print and turning focus to CPI, as regional releases point to upside risks.
In commodities, Precious metals have had a volatile session, with spot gold and silver briefly slipping below $5,000 and $100 an ounce respectively before climbing back above them, though both remain sharply lower on the day. Base metals have also come under pressure to a lesser extent, with LME copper down about 1.6%. Oil retreated as risk-off sentiment swept across broader markets, though Trump’s escalating threats against Iran are keeping the market on edge. Brent traded around $70 a barrel on Friday after climbing above that level in the previous session for the first time since July.
The London Metal Exchange suffered a one-hour delay to the start of trading on Friday after a technical problem, causing confusion among traders after a week of intense volatility and eye-watering price gains.
Bitcoin just won't stop falling, plunging more than 5% as it extended a rout that gathered pace on Thursday. The token is now down more than 30% from an all-time high reached in October. Over $1.5 billion in bullish positions across all tokens have been liquidated in the past 24 hours, according to CoinGlass data.
Today's US economic calendar includes December PPI (8:30am) and January MNI Chicago PMI (9:45am). Fed speaker slate includes Miran (11:10am), Musalem (1:30pm), Miran (3pm) and Bowman (5pm).
Market Snapshot
S&P 500 mini -0.4%
Nasdaq 100 mini -0.6%
Russell 2000 mini -1.4%
Stoxx Europe 600 +0.3%
DAX +0.4%
CAC 40 +0.3%
10-year Treasury yield +2 basis points at 4.25%
VIX +2.2 points at 19.04
Bloomberg Dollar Index +0.4% at 1182.92
euro -0.4% at $1.1919
WTI crude -1.4% at $64.51/barrel
Top Overnight News
President Trump said he intends to nominate Kevin Warsh to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve. BBG
Gold and silver slumped while the dollar rose. A Warsh-led Fed may temporarily cool the greenback-debasement trade by easing concerns over central bank independence. BBG
President Donald Trump and Senate Democrats reached an agreement to fund the federal government as a Friday midnight deadline for a partial shutdown approaches.: WSJ
Speaker Johnson said he's not confident that a government shutdown will be avoided.
China plans to sell about $29 billion in special bonds to recapitalize some its largest insurers, people familiar said, strengthening the biggest players amid pressure to consolidate. BBG
Large US companies are set to lay off at least 52,000 workers as the jobs market cools: FT.
White House said President Trump will sign executive orders at 11:00EST and is participating in a policy meeting at 14:00EST. Trump confirms he's signing a historic executive order to combat the scourge of addiction and substance abuse.
China has given its top AI startup DeepSeek approval to buy Nvidia's H200 artificial intelligence chips with regulatory conditions that are still being finalized. ByteDance, Alibaba, and Tencent had been given permission to purchase more than 400,000 H200 chips in total. RTRS
Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Ukraine is ready to halt strikes on Russian energy infrastructure if Moscow abides by a US proposal for a weeklong truce. BBG
Trump warned the UK and Canada against striking new business deals with China, after their leaders visited Beijing this month in an effort to deepen ties. BBG
The euro-zone’s largest economies all grew at the end of last year. German GDP rose 0.3% in the fourth quarter, beating an initial estimate. Spain reported a speedier-than-expected expansion of 0.8%, while France and Italy also grew. BBG
Headline PPI probably held at 0.2% in December, adding to evidence that tariff price pressure up the supply chain is fading. The core rate likely rose to 0.2% from a flat reading in November. BBG
Trump sues the IRS and Treasury for $10bln over tax return leaks.
Trade/Tariffs
China is to lower tariffs on whisky imports to 5% from February 2nd.
US President Trump said it is ‘very dangerous’ for the UK to get into business with China and even more dangerous for Canada to get into business with China.
US President Trump threatens to charge Canada a 50% tariff on any and all aircraft sold to the US.
White House noted that US President Trump signed an executive order declaring a national emergency and establishing a process to impose tariffs on goods from countries that sell or otherwise provide oil to Cuba.
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk
APAC stocks were pressured heading into month-end, as the Apple-related euphoria following record iPhone sales, was dampened as yields gained and the dollar strengthened on reports that the Trump administration is preparing for the nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next Fed Chair. ASX 200 was dragged lower by underperformance in miners and resources stocks as metal prices took a hit. Nikkei 225 swung between gains and losses following a slew of data releases, including softer-than-expected Tokyo CPI, better-than-expected Industrial Production and weak Retail Sales, but with the downside in the index cushioned by a weaker currency. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp underperformed with little fresh drivers and indirect pressure from US President Trump, who warned of dangers for the UK and Canada regarding getting into business with China, while CK Hutchison shares were hit after reports that the Panama Supreme Court ruled the Co.'s ports contract is unconstitutional.
Top Asian News
The probe into the Air India crash leans toward deliberate pilot action, Bloomberg reported.
Hitachi (6501 JT) is reportedly seeking a buyers for its data storage business, according to Bloomberg.
LG Electronics (066570 KS) final Q4 (KRW) loss 828bln, oper. loss 109bln (prelim. loss 109bln), rev. 23.9tln (prelim. 23.9tln).
European equities (STOXX 600 +0.3%) have opened mostly on a firmer footing. Strength comes amid a rebound in the DAX 40 (+0.7%) after yesterday's SAP-induced pressure, a narrative added to by strong Adidas (+5.2%) earnings. European sectors are mostly in the green, leading are Banks, Travel & Leisure and Technology. The former have been underpinned by reports that Kevin Warsh is likely to be the next Fed Chair, which has bolstered global yields. Furthermore, the sector benefits from gains in Caixabank (+4.0%) after the Co. announced that it expects NII to grow in 2026. To the downside, Basic Resources has been weighed down by pressure in metal prices, whilst energy has been pinned down by crude as the complex gives back gains.
Top European News
UK and China weigh a cross-border asset management scheme to deepen market ties, according to SCMP.
US Treasury said semi-annual currency report concluded no major US trading partners manipulated currency to gain unfair trade advantage during four quarters through June 2025.
FX
DXY is on a firmer footing today, following reports that the US administration is leaning towards Kevin Warsh to replace Fed Chair Powell – President Trump said he will make the announcement on Friday. Further details surrounding specific timing is currently light, aside from a couple of appearances towards the later part of the day. As it stands, Warsh’s odds have risen to ~94% (prev. 34% pre-report), whilst Rieder has fallen to ~4% (prev. 34.6% pre-report). DXY currently at the upper end of a 96.16-96.76 range.
G10s are entirely losing against the firmer Dollar, with clear underperformance in the Aussie as it takes a hit from the pressure seen across underlying metals prices. JPY also towards the bottom of the pile, with USD/JPY currently trading at the upper end of a 152.86-154.38 range. Two factors for the JPY today; a) widening yield differentials as traders weigh a potential Warsh pick, b) softer-than-expected Tokyo CPI, better-than-expected Industrial Production and weak Retail Sales.
EUR has had a slew of EZ data to digest throughout the day. French GDP contracted a touch from the prior, whilst Spanish, Italy and Germany was a little more upbeat. The German figure itself spurred some minor pressure in the single currency at the time, with the pair then trundling lower as the morning progressed. No move to the EZ GDP metrics, which topped exp. but contracted a touch from the prior. At the same time was the release of several German State CPIs, which on balance was more-or-less in-line with what is expected from the mainland figure due at 13:00 GMT. One point to note is that the NRW state held a bit more of a hawkish skew (0.1% M/M vs prev. 0.0%; mainland expects 0.0%). Currently trades in a 1.1894-1.1974 range.
Fixed Income
USTs on the backfoot as Kevin Warsh will reportedly be nominated by President Trump later today for the Fed Chair position. Reaction occurring as while Warsh has called for immediate rate cuts, his policy stance is net-hawkish vs the other options available to Trump. While Warsh will likely call for lower policy rates, given his recent commentary and the clear pressure from the administration, the main point of focus will be on the balance sheet, as Warsh has long been critical of QE and a large balance sheet. USTs at a 111-17+ low, a tick above Thursday's base, which itself is a tick above the WTD 111-15+ low. Amidst this, yields are firmer across the curve, which itself is steeper with action led by the long-end, as while Warsh is a hawkish pick vs the other options, he ultimately will still try to push rates lower in the near term, which may drive inflation and by extension rates higher on a longer horizon.
That aside, the morning's stronger-than-expected German Q4 GDP sent Bunds to a 128.07 low with losses of 26 ticks at most. In proximity, we saw the German state CPIs hit ahead of the 13:00GMT mainland figure, the M/M skew was broadly in-line with the mainland consensus, while the Y/Y skew was a hawkish one. For reference, German CPI is expected at 2.0% Y/Y (prev. 1.8%) and 0.0% M/M (prev. 0.0%).
Gilts gapped lower by 26 ticks before slipping further to a 90.59 trough, given the bias from USTs. Since, the benchmark has rebounded a touch and is holding around 90.90, some 10 ticks above opening levels, but still in the red by c. 15 ticks.
Japan sold JPY 2.2tln in 2-year JGBs; b/c 3.88x (prev. 3.26x); average yield 1.253% (prev. 1.129%). Lowest accepted price 100.080 vs. prev. 99.920. Weighted average price 100.090 vs prev. 99.942. Tail in price 0.010 vs prev. 0.022.
Australia sold AUD 1bln 4.25% March 2036 bonds, b/c 3.34, avg. yield 4.8039%.
Commodities
Crude benchmarks started the Asia-Pac session on the backfoot, partially driven by the stronger greenback, but primarily by comments from President Trump, who said he plans to have talks with Tehran and hopes the US do not have to use the big, powerful ships. WTI dropped to a trough of USD 64.30/bbl following the potential Fed Chair announcement reports re. Warsh, before immediately paring back the entirety of the move. Around 30 minutes later, on the Trump comments, prices steadily dropped, and WTI hit a low of USD 63.65/bbl. Benchmarks have since consolidated in a broad c. USD 1.00/bbl range.
Precious metals slide as European trade continues, with spot XAU currently trading at USD 5090/oz, nearly USD 500/oz lower from the ATH made in Thursday's session. The yellow metal briefly lost USD 5k/oz, slipping to a USD 4941/oz trough before rebounding.
Spot silver has slipped even further and has wiped out the entirety of this week's gains, to sub-100/oz. This comes following the recent strength in the greenback as Kevin Warsh emerges as the frontrunner for the Fed Chair role, with markets suggesting that he is more hawkish than other candidates such as Rick Rieder. President Trump is set to announce the pick later today.
Alongside precious metals, base metals have been hit by the stronger dollar, with 3M LME Copper briefly tagging USD 13.1k/t before slightly paring back losses but remaining below USD 13.5k/t. For context, the red metal was trading at USD 14.53k/t just 18 hours ago.
OPEC+ likely to keep its pause on oil output increases for March at Sunday meeting, according to sources.
ArcelorMittal (MT NA) and Liberia sign a new long-term mineral development agreement. "The expansion project, which is nearing completion, will see iron ore shipments increase from historic levels of approximately 5 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) to 20 mtpa in 2026 alongside improvements in product quality to higher grade, higher value ore.". "The Company is also undertaking feasibility studies for further expansion of its iron ore asset beyond 20 mtpa.".
Explosion reported in an oil refinery at northwestern Turkish province of Kocaeli, while causes of the explosion at the oil refinery are unknown, according to Al-Arabiya.
LME trading has now opened following a delay due to technical issues.
White House clarifies that US sanctions relief for Venezuela covers refining and other downstream activities, but not upstream production and White House official said more announcements on Venezuela sanctions easing are expected.
London Metal Exchange delays market opening due to technical issues, according to Bloomberg.
Geopolitics: Ukraine
Russia's Kremlin said US President Trump personally asked Russian President Putin to halt strikes on Kyiv until Feb 1 and create favourable conditions for negotiations.
Ukraine's President Zelensky said the compromise on territory has not yet been reached; Ukraine will not strike Russian energy infrastructure if Russia halts its attacks on Ukraine's energy infrastructure. Halting strikes on energy targets is a US initiative and a personal proposal of US President Trump. said he is inviting Putin to Kyiv if Putin "dares". No official ceasefire agreement on energy target exists between both countries. Reiterates readiness for leaders summit in any format, but not in Moscow or Belarus.
Geopolitics: Middle East
US President Trump said he plans to have talks with Tehran and there are big, powerful ships going to Iran, he hopes they don't have to use them. said:He told the Iranians 'no' to nuclear weapons, stop killing protesters, and that they have to do something.
US President Trump said have a team headed to Iran.
US Event Calendar
8:30 am: United States Dec PPI Final Demand MoM, est. 0.2%, prior 0.2%
8:30 am: United States Dec PPI Ex Food and Energy MoM, est. 0.2%, prior 0%
8:30 am: United States Dec PPI Final Demand YoY, est. 2.76%, prior 3%
8:30 am: United States Dec PPI Ex Food and Energy YoY, est. 2.9%, prior 3%
9:45 am: United States Jan MNI Chicago PMI, est. 43.65, prior 43.5, revised 42.7
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap
Morning from Milan where Winter Olympics fever was clear from my hotel where a number of the organising committees were setting up yesterday. Unlike Eddie "the Eagle" Edwards I haven't managed to bluff my way into the Ski Jump to represent team GB next week. My knee surgeon will be relieved. On that topic a couple of weeks ago I suggested I uploaded my scans into AI to ask what was wrong with my knee. It was nearly right and essentially my right knee cap groove has worn away and I'll probably have a knee cap replacement in the winter (after my back has recovered) that will no doubt be upgraded to a full knee replacement at some point in the next 1-10 years as the rest of the knee is on borrowed time. I have been offered a viscosupplement injection instead that inserts a permanent gel into your knee, although my surgeon said he wouldn't have it as there hasn't been enough evidence of its long-term effect on your body! If anyone has had any experience of them let me know. Meanwhile my back surgeon has cleared me to start a gradual return to golf earlier than I thought. So chipping now, three quarter swings in a few weeks and then hopefully ready for the Masters in April. My nerve is still damaged and constantly irritable but he said that could take 12-18 months to repair if it is going to. Frustrating.
One sporting battle that seems to drawing to a close is the race for the Fed Chair nomination. Last night President Trump said he would announce his Fed pick this morning. In the last few hours, Bloomberg reported that the administration was preparing for Kevin Warsh to be nominated, with his odds on Polymarket spiking to 92% as I type. As a reminder, Warsh served as Fed Governor during between 2006 and 2011, a period that included the Fed’s response to the GFC. While his recent comments have been supportive of lower rates, in the past he’s been hawkishly critical of the Fed’s expansive use of its balance sheet. Our US economists published a note on what a Warsh nomination would mean for the Fed shortly before Christmas (see here).
Treasuries and equity futures have reacted negatively in response overnight. While 2yr yields are little changed, 10yr and 30yr yields are +3.4bps and +4.6bps higher as I type, with S&P 500 futures -0.36% lower as I type. So the initial market reaction consistent with a view that the Fed put for asset prices could be less strong under Warsh as Chair than under other candidates. Gold (-3.10%) and oil (-1.30%) have also sold off overnight, while the dollar (+0.31%) is benefitting.
Prior to this, markets had showed some resilience amid heightened volatility yesterday as several assets mostly recovered after sharp plunges. The S&P 500 (-0.13%) almost fully reversed a -1.54% intra-day slump, though the NASDAQ (-0.72%) did see a decent pullback, driven by the biggest daily decline for Microsoft (-9.99%) since the pandemic turmoil of March 2020. Precious metals saw a volatile day too, with gold (-0.77%) finally ending a run of 8 consecutive daily gains to close at $5,375/oz. At one point it had fallen -5.7% on the day in what seemed like a sudden deleveraging. Given that the total value of Gold in the world is around $37tn, that was a $2.1tn brief slump. Providing some perspective, it was only Monday that we first went above $5000/oz and we’re still about 4% above that level despite the decline this morning. Yesterday’s mood also wasn’t helped by the geopolitical backdrop, as speculation about a potential US strike on Iran helped push Brent crude oil above $70/bbl again.
The tech slump was arguably the biggest story yesterday, which came after Microsoft’s earnings following the previous day’s close. As a reminder, their capital expenditures were above analysts’ estimates, which added to concern about how quickly these would pay off. Together with weak results by business software provider SAP (-16.07%) in Europe this hit a whole bunch of software stocks, with ServiceNow (-9.94%) and Workday (-7.65%) also among the worst performers in the S&P 500. However, the Mag-7 (-0.05%) were little changed, with the group supported by Meta (+10.40%) after their own outlook was better than expected. Moreover, the equal weight S&P 500 was far calmer and closed +0.13% with 287 stocks actually closing higher on the day as the broader equity mood improved.
After the close yesterday, we also heard from Apple, which delivered a solid Q4 sales beat ($143.8bn vs $138.4bn est.) and upbeat Q1 revenue growth guidance (13-16% vs 10% expected), driven by strong sales of the new iPhone 17 and a rebound in China. However, rising costs took some of the shine off that strong top line, with Apple’s shares rising about half a percent in after-hours trading following a +0.72% gain in the regular session. In other overnight tech news, Bloomberg reported that SpaceX is considering a potential merger with either Tesla or Elon Musk’s AI firm xAI.
In the meantime, geopolitical fears continued to ramp up yesterday, which pushed oil prices up to their highest level in months even if they've moved a bit lower this morning. For instance, Brent crude (+3.60%) moved up to $70.86/bbl at the US close, their highest level since July. Of course, Trump warned on Wednesday that a “massive Armada” was heading to Iran, but yesterday we then heard from an AP report that Iran had issued a warning to ships at sea that they planned to run a drill that included live firing in the Strait of Hormuz. And with oil prices heading higher, that’s revived concern about inflation, with the US 5yr inflation swap (+2.7bps) closing at a 3-month high of 2.53%.
On the topic of commodities, the rally in precious metals finally showed signs of reversing. Initially, gold prices had looked set for a further gain, reaching an all-time intraday record of $5595/oz as we were going to press yesterday. However, they then sharply reversed course after the US open, plummeting down to $5,106/oz, before paring back those losses to close “only” -0.77% lower on the day at $5,375/oz. So that ended a run of 8 consecutive daily gains for gold, which had been the biggest 8-day advance since Lehman Brothers’ collapse in 2008, at +17.9%. It was a similar story for silver too, which slipped back -0.86% from its record high but a much better close than the -8.4% fall intraday.
Otherwise, another risk that is still in the process of being resolved is the potential for a US government shutdown tonight. For context, this emerged as a key issue last weekend, after Democrats called on funding for the Department of Homeland Security to be taken out of a government funding bill. Last night the White House and Senate Democrats reached a deal that would provide a two-week stopgap for Homeland Security funding while funding other departments until the end of the fiscal year in September. While political agreement now appears to be in place, procedural hurdles may still lead to a brief partial shutdown starting at midnight tonight, especially as the House is not currently in session. Polymarket odds for a shutdown on Saturday are at 67%, having been as low as 35% yesterday.
Meanwhile, the latest US data was slightly underwhelming yesterday, with the weekly jobless claims coming in at 209k (vs. 205k expected) in the week ending Jan 24, alongside a +10k upward revision to the previous week, which now stands at 210k. On top of that, the November trade deficit widened more than expected to $56.8bn (vs. $44.0bn expected). So that helped push the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow estimate for Q4 down to an annualised +4.2%, down from +5.4% previously.
Earlier in Europe, we saw a similar risk-off move yesterday, with the STOXX 600 down -0.23%, whilst Germany’s DAX (-2.07%) had its worst performance since September after the slump by SAP (-16.07%). However, there was some more promising economic data from Europe, as the European Commission’s economic sentiment indicator for the Euro Area reached a 3-year high of 99.4 (vs. 97.1 expected). Even so, the risk-off tone dominated, and sovereign bonds rallied further as investors priced in a growing chance of an ECB rate cut this year, which is now seen as a 31% chance by the September meeting. So yields on 10yr bunds (-1.8bps), OATs (-0.9bps) and BTPs (-1.9bps) all moved lower in response.
In Asia the Hang Seng (-1.78%), Shanghai Composite (-1.19%) and the CSI (-1.01%) are all underperforming. Elsewhere, the Nikkei (-0.18%) and the S&P/ASX 200 (-0.67%) are also trading in negative territory. The KOSPI (+0.62%) is defying the broader regional trend, supported by strong performances from major chipmakers.
Early morning data indicated that the headline Tokyo CPI inflation decreased to +1.5% year-on-year in January (compared to +1.7% expected), marking its lowest level since February 2022. This represents a slowdown from +2.0% in the previous month. Core inflation, which excludes fresh food, also moderated, rising by +2.0% from a year earlier (versus +2.2% expected) and a previous reading of 2.3%. This moderation aligns core inflation with the Bank of Japan's 2% target after several months of stronger outcomes. The data alleviates pressure on the BOJ to raise rates again in the near future, despite a still tight labor market. JGBs are 1-2bps lower across the curve and the Yen has fallen -0.65%. So one to watch a week after the Treasury "rate check".
Looking at the day ahead, data releases will include the Euro Area Q4 GDP reading and the December unemployment rate, whilst in Germany we’ll also get the flash CPI print and unemployment for January. In the US, we’ll get the PPI for December as well. Central bank speakers include the ECB’s Vujcic, and the Fed’s Musalem. Finally, today’s earnings releases include Exxon Mobil and Chevron
Tyler Durden
Fri, 01/30/2026 - 08:41 Close
Fri, 30 Jan 2026 13:30:00 +0000 Straight From "Central Casting": President Trump Confirms Kevin Warsh As Next Fed Chair Nominee
Straight From "Central Casting": President Trump Confirms Kevin Warsh As Next Fed Chair Nominee
Update (0700ET) : As was apparently leaked last night - for a big win on Polymarket - President Trump has just
Read more.....
Straight From "Central Casting": President Trump Confirms Kevin Warsh As Next Fed Chair Nominee
Update (0700ET) : As was apparently leaked last night - for a big win on Polymarket - President Trump has just confirmed he is nominating Kevin Warsh to become the next Fed Chair:
"I am pleased to announce that I am nominating Kevin Warsh to be the CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM."
Trump praises Warsh's background:
Kevin currently serves as the Shepard Family Distinguished Visiting Fellow in Economics at the Hoover Institution, and Lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business.
He is a Partner of Stanley Druckenmiller at Duquesne Family Office LLC. Kevin received his A.B. from Stanford University, and J.D. from Harvard Law School. He has conducted extensive research in the field of Economics and Finance. Kevin issued an Independent Report to the Bank of England proposing reforms in the conduct of Monetary Policy in the United Kingdom. Parliament adopted the Report’s recommendations.
Kevin Warsh became the youngest Fed Governor, ever, at 35, and served as a Member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System from 2006 until 2011, as the Federal Reserve’s Representative to the Group of Twenty (G-20), and as the Board’s Emissary to the Emerging and Advanced Economies in Asia.
In addition, he was Administrative Governor, managing and overseeing the Board’s operations, personnel, and financial performance. Prior to his appointment to the Board, from 2002 until 2006, Kevin served as Special Assistant to the President for Economic Policy, and Executive Secretary of the White House National Economic Council. Previously, Kevin was a member of the Mergers & Acquisitions Department at Morgan Stanley & Co., in New York, serving as Vice President and Executive Director.
Trump already putting Warsh on a podium:
"I have known Kevin for a long period of time, and have no doubt that he will go down as one of the GREAT Fed Chairmen, maybe the best.
On top of everything else, he is "central casting,” and he will never let you down.
Congratulations Kevin!"
President Trump praised the other candidates...
Does Trump really know who he is picking?
Here's Bloomberg economist Anna Wong pointing out Warsh's not-so-easy-on-inflation background:
Here we chart his inflation assessment during the FOMC meeting from 2006-2011 (along the unemployment rate, with core PCE inflation in the background).
One standout one:
April 2009 - 7 months after Lehman, core PCE inflation at 0.8%, unemployment at 9%, he said:
"I continue to be more worried about upside risks to inflation than downside risks."
How long before we get one of these tweets...
All of which got us wondering...
Precious metals are bouncing a little on the news (sell the rumor, buy the news?)
* * *
It all started a little after 7pm ET when, refuting a previous report that he would announce the next Fed Chair next week, Trump said that he would unveil his pick for Powell's replacement on Friday morning.
That's also when the Polymarket odds of Kevin Warsh exploded higher (after a curious reversal we observed an hour earlier, when Warsh overtook Rick Reider, indicating that once again someone knew something ahead of time), following a report from a journalist that "Trump met 2day with his two finalists for Fed Reserve chair -- and is leaning toward KEVIN WARSH to replace Jerome Powell, I'm told. Nothing is official I'm told. But 1 source close to Trump says Warsh basically has the wink & the nod. "
That's when Warsh went from slight lead, to full-on favorite at Polymarket.
And as many were wondering if this was just a trial balloon, one which sent futures, bitcoin and gold lower, and dollar and yields higher, a flashing red Bloomberg headline confirmed this was not a drill:
*TRUMP ADMINISTRATION SAID TO BE PREPARING WARSH FED NOMINATION
The report, predictably, said just what one would expect:
The Trump administration is preparing for the president to nominate Kevin Warsh to be the next Federal Reserve chair, according to people familiar with the matter. President Donald Trump said Thursday he plans to announce his pick to lead the US central bank on Friday morning.
Echoing what we already learned earlier, the report went on to note that "Warsh, a former Fed governor and one of the four finalists on Trump’s shortlist to be the next central bank leader, visited the White House on Thursday, one person said."
Kevin Warsh, obviously
The president teased his impending announcement without giving the name away Thursday evening, saying the pick won’t be too surprising and will be someone known to everyone in the financial world.
“A lot of people think this is somebody that could’ve been there a few years ago,” Trump said. It wasn't clear however if Trump knew that his nominee would spark a crash in the one asset class that makes up the bulk of his net worth, namely bitcoin, which had a catastrophic day earlier, and which plunged even more on the Bloomberg confirmation.
It wasn't just bitcoin: futures also fell, the dollar and treasury yields pushed higher (i.e., making housing not more affordable), and gold crashed again, on bets Warsh - best known as one of the most hawkish former Fed officials, often arguing for tighter monetary policy and a smaller Fed balance sheet, and who changed his tune only recently in hopes to ingratiate himself with Trump
It is unclear if Trump (or rather his advisors) knew any of this, which is why there is still the possibility that once Trump sees the impact of this particular trial balloon, will change his mind as even Bloomberg's sources cautioned that the selection is not final until Trump makes a formal announcement.
In the end, nobody knows what will come out of Trump's mouth until some time tomorrow. We would not be surprised at all if it is, again, a huge surprise. If not, we already know how this will end...
Tyler Durden
Fri, 01/30/2026 - 08:30 Close
Fri, 30 Jan 2026 13:25:00 +0000 Nvidia Aided DeepSeek AI Breakthrough With "Extensive Technical Support," House China Chair Warns
Nvidia Aided DeepSeek AI Breakthrough With "Extensive Technical Support," House China Chair Warns
Congressman John Moolenaar (R-MI), chairman of the House Select Committee on the CCP, penned a letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lu
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Nvidia Aided DeepSeek AI Breakthrough With "Extensive Technical Support," House China Chair Warns
Congressman John Moolenaar (R-MI), chairman of the House Select Committee on the CCP, penned a letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick that Nvidia provided extensive technical support to DeepSeek, enabling the startup to achieve chatbot performance breakthroughs despite US export controls on advanced AI chips to China to mitigate the risks of the technology falling into the hands of Beijing's military.
"While NVIDIA asserts its relationship with DeepSeek is "to promote the [AI] ecosystem flywheel and improve NVIDIA's products," documents produced to the Committee reveal NVIDIA provided extensive technical support that enabled DeepSeek—now integrated into People's Liberation Army (PLA) systems and a demonstrated cybersecurity risk—to achieve frontier AI capabilities ," Moolenaar wrote in the letter sent to Lutnick's office on Wednesday.
Moolenaar continued, "These findings demonstrate why rigorous enforcement of the Department's H200 export rule, which requires certification that chips will not serve military purposes, is essential—even if such enforcement effectively prevents H200 exports to the PRC altogether."
DeepSeek's release sent shock waves through US markets last year - about this time - over risks that Chinese AI models were developed with far less computing power, fueling concerns that China was catching up with the US despite export restrictions on advanced AI chips to China.
Moolenaar explained in the letter that Nvidia's engineers helped DeepSeek dramatically improve training efficiency from export-controlled H800 chips, and proposed distributing DeepSeek as an Nvidia enterprise product, undermining the intent of export controls.
"Nvidia treated DeepSeek accordingly - as a legitimate commercial partner deserving of standard technical support," he said.
Moolenaar requested a Commerce Department briefing by Feb. 13 on the enforcement of the H200 and expanded safeguards to protect America's AI leadership.
Meanwhile, President Trump's administration approved sales of Nvidia's H200 to China with some restrictions, including that the chips not be sold to companies linked to the Chinese military. The H200 is more powerful than the H800 chips DeepSeek used.
Last week, Chinese regulators told Alibaba, Tencent, and ByteDance that approvals to purchase the H200 chips were nearing.
Approval would represent a material bull catalyst for Nvidia stock and a major win for CEO Jensen Huang, who has stated that the China AI chip opportunity alone could generate up to $50 billion in revenue over the coming years.
"If even the world's most valuable company cannot rule out the military use of its products when sold to (Chinese) entities, rigorous licensing restrictions and enforcement are essential to prevent such assurances from becoming superficial formalities," Moolenaar wrote.
"Chips sales to ostensibly non-military end users in China will inevitably result in a violation of the military end-use restrictions," he added.
Separate but notable, LLMs are already being used by the Ukrainian military to more effectively target Russian forces, primarily for SIGINT operations. The rise of LLMs in battle cannot be stopped, and many anti-war critics lack firsthand exposure to modern battlefields, where it is clear that the military use of LLMs is underway. The focus, therefore, should be on understanding and preparing for this emerging threat.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 01/30/2026 - 08:25 Close