Economy January 26, 2026

Markets Brace for a Packed Week: Fed, Tech Earnings, Japan and Emerging Markets in Focus

A confluence of central bank decisions, major tech results and geopolitical détente could steer asset prices — if tensions stay muted

By Derek Hwang
Markets Brace for a Packed Week: Fed, Tech Earnings, Japan and Emerging Markets in Focus

Jan 26 - Markets face a busy week with the Federal Reserve's policy meeting, a truce in transatlantic tensions over Greenland, major tech earnings from several U.S. and South Korean giants, political turbulence in Japan ahead of a snap election, and a raft of emerging market rate announcements. Investors will be watching for signals on policy direction, central bank independence, corporate spending on AI and stresses in FX and debt markets.

Key Points

  • A diplomatic thaw over Greenland may reduce one geopolitical risk, potentially supporting global equities while easing pressure on gold and defence stocks - impacts seen in equities, precious metals and defence sectors.
  • The Federal Reserve is expected to hold rates steady, but concerns about the Fed's independence linked to an inquiry into the headquarters refurbishment, a Supreme Court case involving a governor, and succession uncertainty could affect U.S. monetary policy credibility - implications for U.S. rates and bond markets.
  • Major tech companies including Microsoft, Apple, Meta and Tesla report earnings this week; markets will focus on returns from heavy AI-related spending and whether firms can beat elevated expectations - key for technology sector valuations and equity markets.

Jan 26 - Fasten your seatbelt: the next several days promise more market-moving developments. Investors will be parsing central bank commentary, corporate earnings from some of the world's largest technology firms, political manoeuvring in Japan and a heavy calendar of emerging market interest rate decisions. Below are the five key storylines likely to shape investor sentiment and market flows this week.


1. A tentative thaw over Greenland - can it hold?

Recent diplomatic cooling between the U.S. administration led by President Donald Trump, Europe and NATO over the spat involving Greenland has eased one immediate geopolitical risk. Markets - with the notable exceptions of investors who favour gold and firms linked to defence spending - stand to benefit if the tensions continue to recede. For that to occur, market participants will want concrete elements of the so-called "framework deal" the parties say they have agreed, and for the episode to remain out of the U.S. president's social media spotlight.

If the détente persists it could underpin further gains for global equity indices and take some pressure off gold, which the market commentary notes has surged past $5,000 an ounce. Yet the same commentary warns that, given how the year has begun, a resolution here may simply clear the way for a different geopolitical flare-up elsewhere.


2. The Federal Reserve - steady path but independence under scrutiny

The U.S. central bank convenes for its first policy meeting of the year, with the expectation that the Federal Reserve will hold interest rates unchanged when it concludes its deliberations on Wednesday. Attention will be divided between the outlook for future rate moves and an intensifying debate over the Fed's institutional independence.

Chair Jerome Powell is due to hold a press conference for the first time since reports emerged that the Trump administration opened an inquiry into the multi-billion-dollar refurbishment of the Fed's headquarters. Powell has criticised that probe as a "pretext" intended to exert greater sway over monetary policy. The episode adds to two other threads in the independence debate: a U.S. Supreme Court case tied to a presidential effort to remove governor Lisa Cook, and the still-to-be-announced decision on who will succeed Powell as Fed chair in May. Investors will be watching the tone and language from the Fed for any indication of how these pressures may influence policy-making.


3. The tech giants' results - AI spending and high expectations

Four of the seven companies often grouped as the "Magnificent Seven" will publish quarterly results this week: Microsoft, Apple, the parent company of Facebook now called Meta, and Tesla. South Korea's Samsung will also report. For markets, the central question is whether the prodigious capital directed toward artificial intelligence initiatives is beginning to deliver returns.

Analysts and investors are not merely looking for companies to top earnings forecasts. The commentary stresses that firms will need to substantially exceed expectations and provide bullish guidance to justify the lofty valuations that have become prevalent in this segment of the market. Outside of the AI winners, other pockets of the market have been the strongest performers recently, suggesting that investors accustomed to blockbuster tech results will demand even larger upside to remain satisfied.


4. Volatility in Japan as an election looms

Campaigning in Japan is intensifying ahead of a snap election scheduled for February 8, called by Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi to consolidate influence within the ruling Liberal Democratic Party. Takaichi's proposals to increase spending and suspend the country's food sales tax for two years have put pressure on the yen and Japanese government bonds, prompting calls for calm from Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama last week and prompting the Bank of Japan to offer hints that it could raise interest rates.

Market observers expressed concern that the yen has detached from its traditional anchor - the spread between Japanese and U.S. long-term interest rates - and that the volatile behaviour in Japan's bond market reflects investor unease about the country's very high debt load, cited at 221% of GDP. These developments have contributed to jitters that could affect currency, fixed income and broader risk sentiment.


5. Emerging market central banks - a mixed bag of action and guidance

A string of rate meetings in emerging markets is scheduled, and while many are not expected to move policy rates immediately, markets will scrutinise the guidance and tone from central banks as the rally in emerging market currencies, debt and equities continues.

Brazil is widely anticipated to keep its policy rate at 15% but may signal an intention to lower it in future. Chile is expected to mirror Brazil's stance by remaining at 4.5%. Hungary is forecast to hold at 6.5% as it approaches a pivotal election. South Africa is projected to keep its rate at 6.75% given persistent electricity-related inflation, although a reduction has not been ruled out entirely.

Not all meetings are expected to be status quo. Colombia is forecast to implement a cut in the range of 25 to 50 basis points despite recent wage gains, and Ghana is projected to execute a sizeable easing of around 300 basis points after its currency, the cedi, began to wobble following a year in which it benefited from a gold-linked surge.


Investors will enter the week balancing corporate earnings narratives, central bank pronouncements and political developments. The confluence of these events could influence sectoral performance across technology, precious metals, fixed income, currencies and emerging market assets.

Risks

  • Damage to confidence in the Federal Reserve's independence stemming from the inquiry into the Fed's refurbishment, legal action involving a governor and uncertainty around leadership succession - a risk to U.S. monetary policy credibility and bond market stability.
  • Political-driven policy proposals in Japan ahead of the February 8 snap election have pressured the yen and government bonds, and the country's 221% debt-to-GDP ratio is cited as a concern - posing risks for currency markets, Japanese government bonds and investor sentiment.
  • Divergent paths and policy changes among emerging market central banks, including expected cuts in Colombia and a large easing in Ghana, could create volatility across EM currencies, debt and equities despite an ongoing hot streak.

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