The “Super Wednesday” Stress Test: Banks, Bonds, and the Inflation Reality Check

January 14, 2026

If Tuesday was a warning shot, today is the main event. Wall Street faces a “Super Wednesday” of volatility as a deluge of critical bank earnings, Federal Reserve commentary, and economic data hits the wires simultaneously. The pre-market mood is tense, shaped largely by the shocking 4% tumble in JPMorgan Chase (JPM) shares yesterday, a decline that signaled investors are no longer satisfied with mere stability. They are demanding growth in an environment where credit margins are being squeezed by policy risks and sticky inflation. As trading desks come online, all eyes are on the trio of financial giants reporting before the bell: Bank of America (BAC), Wells Fargo (WFC), and Citigroup (C). The stakes could not be higher. With JPMorgan serving as the canary in the coal mine yesterday, the “whisper numbers” for its peers have been hurriedly revised downward.

The core anxiety isn’t just about earnings per share; it is about the “credit cliff.” Traders are parsing these reports for signs that the record credit card delinquencies seen in late 2025 are bleeding into broader loan books. CEO Jamie Dimon’s comments yesterday regarding the proposed 10% cap on credit card interest rates sent a chill through the sector. His warning that such regulation would “decimate credit availability” has put the spotlight firmly on Citigroup today. With Citi’s branded card net credit loss guidance sitting at a steep 3.50%–4.00%, any upward revision in those loss reserves could trigger a sector-wide sell-off. Similarly, analysts are expecting Bank of America to post revenue of roughly $27.8 billion, but the real test will be Net Interest Income (NII). If BofA’s NII continues to compress while credit costs rise, it validates the bear case: that banks are trapped between falling yields on assets and rising costs of deposits.

The macroeconomic backdrop offers little comfort. Yesterday’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) print, showing headline inflation ticking up to 2.7% annually, has effectively taken a March rate cut off the table for many strategists. Today’s focus shifts to the Producer Price Index (PPI) and Retail Sales data due at 8:30 AM ET. The bond market is already voting with its feet; yields are creeping higher as issuers rush to lock in capital before rates potentially spike further. Last week saw a historic $95 billion in U.S. investment-grade bond issuance, a “panic buying” of liquidity that suggests corporate treasurers expect borrowing costs to remain elevated through 2026. This isn’t just a US phenomenon, as the catastrophe bond market just shattered annual records with $25.6 billion in new issuance, and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) just priced a record AUD 1 billion “Amazonia Bond.” The world is flooding the market with paper, and indigestion is setting in.

Adding to the complexity, the Federal Reserve is out in force today. Heavyweights like New York Fed President John Williams and Atlanta’s Raphael Bostic are scheduled to speak. Bostic, who is presenting at the Atlanta Business Chronicle 2026 Economic Outlook at 11:00 AM CT, will be scrutinized closely. If he doubles down on the “patience” narrative following the hot CPI print, it could trigger a liquidity squeeze in the afternoon session.

The market is currently trapped between “good news is bad news” (strong retail sales = more inflation) and “bad news is bad news” (weak bank earnings = recession risk). For the next 24 hours, forget the AI hype and the tech sector; the direction of the S&P 500 will be determined by the boring, gritty reality of loan loss reserves and producer price margins.

 

References

Other News and Insights

Date: January 3, 2026

If the final trading days of 2025 felt like a champagne toast to the long-awaited “Soft Landing,” the opening sessions of 2026 are beginning to resemble the morning after. As global markets find their footing in the first full trading week of the new year, investor sentiment has turned notably more cautious—driven less by equity exuberance and more by a sharp repricing in the energy complex.

Brent crude has slid below $61 a barrel, marking its lowest sustained level since the pandemic-era demand shock of 2020. While the macro backdrop today is fundamentally different, the price action reinforces a warning the International Energy Agency has echoed for much of the past year: global oil supply growth is once again running ahead of demand. The issue is not a collapse in consumption, but rather an abundance of barrels entering the market simultaneously.

The emerging “Great Glut” of 2026 is no longer theoretical. Even as OPEC+ has signaled a continued pause on further production increases, output growth from non-OPEC producers, most notably the United States, Guyana, and Brazil, has proven sufficient to overwhelm incremental demand growth. According to recent U.S. Energy Information Administration projections, this imbalance could persist well into the first half of the year. For consumers, the implication is broadly positive, with U.S. gasoline prices projected to drift toward the $3.00-per-gallon range this quarter, assuming crude prices remain under pressure. For equity markets, however, the story is more complicated.

While energy represents a relatively modest share of the S&P 500 by weight, the sector still plays an outsized role in earnings momentum and inflation expectations. A sustained downturn in oil prices threatens to weigh on aggregate earnings growth and dampen index-level performance at a time when valuations elsewhere remain elevated. Even the continued dominance of the so-called “Magnificent Seven” may not be sufficient to fully offset renewed weakness in cyclically sensitive sectors.

That tension is already evident in the growing divergence among Wall Street’s largest forecasting houses. Goldman Sachs reiterated a bullish outlook this week, maintaining its call for the S&P 500 to reach 7,600 by year-end, citing AI-driven productivity gains and the potential tailwind from corporate tax relief. Morgan Stanley, by contrast, has struck a more cautious tone, warning that the artificial intelligence trade is entering a “show me” phase. As capital expenditures rise, investors are increasingly demanding near-term cash flow and margin expansion, not just long-duration growth narratives. The gap between these views suggests that 2026 may reward selectivity rather than broad exposure, with sharp sector rotations replacing the rising-tide dynamics of recent years.

Geopolitics adds another layer of complexity. Control Risks’ newly released RiskMap 2026 identifies “Transactionalism” as the defining risk for global business, underscoring the erosion of predictable, rules-based international cooperation. Long-standing alliances are increasingly giving way to ad hoc, deal-driven arrangements, a trend visible in the fragile U.S.–China détente, which continues to show signs of strain. For multinational firms and supply chain managers, this environment implies greater volatility, as tariffs, export controls, and regulatory sovereignty measures can emerge with little warning.

The Bottom Line: The traditional “January Effect” is colliding with a wall of supply, both in physical commodities and in financial markets. Lower energy prices should ultimately support consumer spending and help anchor inflation expectations, but the near-term impact on energy earnings and market sentiment is proving destabilizing. For now, defensive positioning appears prudent as investors watch whether oil can sustainably hold the $60 level. A decisive break lower would reinforce broader disinflationary signals and could, over time, force the Federal Reserve to reassess the durability of its current policy pause.

References

Goldman Sachs. (2025). 2026 Outlooks: Some Like It Hot. (Retrieved 2026, January 3).
https://www.goldmansachs.com/insights/outlooks/2026-outlooks

U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). (2025, December 9). Short-Term Energy Outlook: Global Oil Prices Forecast.
https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/steo/

Control Risks. (2025). RiskMap 2026: The New Rules – No Rules World.
https://www.controlrisks.com/riskmap/top-risks/the-new-rules-no-rules-world

Investing.com. (2025, December 31). Goldman Sachs forecasts 11% S&P 500 rise in 2026 amid economic growth.
https://www.investing.com/news/analyst-ratings/goldman-sachs-forecasts-11-sp-500-rise-in-2026-amid-economic-growth-93CH-4426751

Rigzone. (2026, January 2). Oil Fluctuates as Traders Weigh Surplus, Geopolitical Risks.
https://www.rigzone.com/news/wire/oil_fluctuates_as_traders_weigh_surplus_geopolitical_risks-02-jan-2026-182677-article/

November 25, 2025

Global capital markets opened Tuesday in a cautious mode, signalling that the initial optimism around the so-called “Busan breakthrough” is beginning to fade. While the headline agreement between President Donald J. Trump and President Xi Jinping, officially described in the White House as a trade and economic deal with China, has averted an immediate trade war, the details are proving harder for investors to digest. U.S. equities such as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite closed in the red on Monday, a weakness flowing into Asian trading where the Nifty 50 and Hang Seng Index are consolidating in narrow ranges.

The root of investor anxiety lies not in the headline agreement but in the fragility of the truce. According to the official White House fact sheet, the U.S. will maintain its 10 % “reciprocal” tariff on Chinese goods and suspend further tariff escalation until November 10, 2026, in return for China suspending the global rollout of its October 9 rare-earth and critical-minerals export controls and issuing general licences for exports of rare earths, gallium, germanium, antimony, and graphite. However, the Chinese side has confirmed only some aspects (e.g., suspension of the October 9 controls for one year) and not all of the general-licensing claims, raising questions about implementation. That gap between U.S. and Chinese interpretation underscores the limited nature of the “deal”.

In technology markets, the uncertainty is especially acute. The high-flying sector has been in suspended animation because key supply-chain dependencies remain subject to geopolitical risk. For example, while Chinese export curbs on rare-earth and dual-use materials have been paused, the pause is time-limited and not a full rollback. The echoes of volatility in companies such as Nvidia Corporation point to a fault line in the “AI trade” where geopolitics could abruptly cut off critical inputs.

On the industrial side, there are flashes of resilience. Keysight Technologies (KEYS) delivered a strong Q4 result, reporting $1.91 per share, which suggests demand for electronic-design and test infrastructure remains firm even as software valuations soften. This divergence, a bifurcation between speculative tech and the “picks and shovels” hardware reality, is likely to shape market behaviour through the end of the quarter.

Meanwhil,e the macro-backdrop remains blurred by a “data fog” caused by the recent prolonged U.S. federal government shutdown, which delayed inflation and employment prints. With incomplete information, the Federal Reserve Board is widely expected to cut rates in December, yet conviction among investors is low. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield remains stubbornly elevated, implying the bond market is still pricing in “higher for longer” inflation risk that equity analysts may not have fully internalised.

The Bottom Line: The so-called “Trump Put” appears to have been replaced by a “Trade Truce”, but the floor it provides is thin. With the monthly derivatives expiry looming, heightened volatility is probable. Smart capital appears to be rotating out of speculative tech and into sectors explicitly favoured by the new trade framework, namely U.S. agriculture and industrial components, while waiting for the Fed to clear the air next month.

References

The White House. (2025, November 1). Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Strikes Deal on Economic and Trade Relations with China. https://www.whitehouse.gov/fact-sheets/2025/11/fact-sheet-president-donald-j-trump-strikes-deal-on-economic-and-trade-relations-with-china/

Times of India. (2025, November 24). Stock market today: Nifty50 ends below 26,000; BSE Sensex down over 330 points. https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/india-business/stock-market-today-nifty50-bse-sensex-november-24-2025-dalal-street-indian-equities-global-markets-donald-trump-tariffs-india-us-trade-deal/articleshow/125530898.cms

Quiver Quantitative. (2025, November 24). KEYSIGHT TECHNOLOGIES ($KEYS) Q4 2025 Earnings Results. https://www.quiverquant.com/news/KEYSIGHT+TECHNOLOGIES+%28%24KEYS%29+Q4+2025+Earnings+Results

Goodreturns. (2025, November 25). Stock Market Outlook Today, 25 November 2025: Sensex, Nifty Likely to Consolidate Ahead of Monthly Expiry. https://www.goodreturns.in/news/stock-market-prediction-today-25-november-2025-sensex-nifty-likely-to-consolidate-ahead-of-monthly-e-1471867.html

China Briefing. (2025, November 10). Trump-Xi Meeting: US and China Agree to Tariff, Rare Earth Concessions. https://www.china-briefing.com/news/trump-xi-meeting-outcomes-and-implications/

Date: December 23, 2025

Wall Street has officially entered the “twilight zone” of the 2025 trading year. As liquidity thins ahead of the Christmas holiday, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq are pushing higher into Tuesday’s session, defying the typical late-December slowdown. But the calm on equity screens contrasts sharply with the urgency building in commodities. Gold futures have vaulted past a major psychological threshold, trading above $4,400 an ounce for the first time, while silver prices are approaching the $70 level.

This unusual alignment, strength in both risk assets (stocks) and traditional risk hedges (gold), suggests investors are simultaneously embracing the Federal Reserve’s recent rate cut to 3.75% and guarding against its longer-term consequences. With the 10-year Treasury yield holding near 4.17%, the speed and scale of the precious metals rally points to growing concern that easier financial conditions could revive inflation pressures as early as Q1 2026.

Geopolitics is adding another layer of uncertainty. Earlier optimism around a temporary “trade truce” is beginning to fade, though the fault lines are shifting. While U.S.–China negotiations remain in a holding pattern, Beijing has escalated trade pressure on Europe. China’s Ministry of Commerce announced that anti-dumping tariffs of between 21.9% and 42.7% on EU dairy imports have taken effect, directly impacting producers in the Netherlands and Denmark, including FrieslandCampina and Arla. The move underscores China’s willingness to use targeted trade measures amid broader strategic tensions.

In contrast, sentiment in the technology sector remains resilient. Reports indicate Nvidia (NVDA) is preparing a compliant version of its H200 AI chip that could allow shipments to China to resume by mid-February. Even with performance restrictions, the prospect of renewed access to Chinese demand has lifted semiconductor stocks, helping offset concerns tied to widening global trade frictions.

Meanwhile, consolidation pressures are intensifying in the media industry as competition shifts from subscriber growth to scale. Paramount Global (PARA) is reported to have made a roughly $40 billion hostile bid for Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD), potentially complicating separate takeover speculation involving Netflix. The aggressive move reflects urgency among legacy media firms ahead of a tougher regulatory environment expected in 2026, which could narrow the window for large-scale mergers.

The “Santa Rally” appears intact, but it is unfolding alongside a sharp reassessment of monetary risk. When gold rises more than 1% in a single session without a clear crisis trigger, it signals heightened sensitivity to central bank policy and currency stability. Equity gains may continue into year-end, but investors should watch the dollar index (DXY) closely. A decisive break lower could indicate that the inflation-sensitive trades of 2026 are already coming into focus.

References

November 21, 2025

For the past two years, the global equity narrative has been single-threaded: Artificial Intelligence as the engine, and Nvidia as the fuel. But as markets opened this Friday morning following a volatile Thursday session, that narrative is facing its most severe stress test to date. Despite Nvidia delivering yet another blockbuster quarterly report, posting revenue of $57.0 billion and blowing past forecasts, Wall Street’s reaction was not a victory lap, but a shudder. 

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 2.2% on Thursday, erasing early gains, while the S&P 500 dropped 1.6%. The reversal signals a critical psychological shift in global capital markets where the burden of proof has moved from “capacity” to “profitability.” Investors are no longer satisfied with hyperscaler capex spending alone, they are demanding clearer evidence that the trillions poured into AI infrastructure are generating commensurate returns across the broader economy. A recent fund-manager survey by Bank of America suggests a record proportion of investors now believe companies are “overinvesting” in AI, raising fears of a cap-ex bubble reminiscent of the late-1990s fibre-optics oversupply.

This tech-sector anxiety is compounded by a murky macroeconomic backdrop in the United States. The recent 43-day federal government shutdown has left the Federal Reserve “flying blind”, creating a “data fog” just when the central bank is poised to make a pivotal interest-rate decision in December. The delayed September jobs report, finally released, painted a confusing picture: while the economy added a robust 119,000 jobs, the unemployment rate unexpectedly rose to 4.4%. 

 These mixed signals, combined with sticky inflation data, have dimmed hopes for an aggressive rate cut, sending the 10-year Treasury yield hovering near 4.14%.

While the “AI trade” falters, capital is rotating into defensive moats. Walmart surged 6.5% after raising its fiscal 2026 outlook, highlighting a stark divergence in the consumer economy where high-income households are retrenching while middle- and lower-income consumers are “trading down” in search of value. This bifurcation is a classic late-cycle signal, suggesting that the “soft landing” promised by policymakers may be bumpier than anticipated.

On the geopolitical front, renewed talk of tariffs under the Donald Trump administration is adding another layer of friction. Coupled with domestic headlines like the “Epstein Files Transparency Act”, the policy environment remains as volatile as the markets. Meanwhile, the crypto sector, often a proxy for risk appetite, has capitulated: Bitcoin has slid below $87,000, marking an approximate 30% draw-down from its October highs.

Bottom Line: The era of blind faith in AI growth is over. We are entering a phase of scrutiny where earnings quality and macroeconomic resilience will outweigh thematic hype. For corporate leaders and investors alike, the message from this week’s volatility is clear: protect margins, watch the consumer, and prepare for a winter of discontent in valuations of high-flying tech.

 

References

Associated Press. (2025, November 20). Big swings keep rocking Wall Street as US stocks drop sharply after erasing a morning surge. https://apnews.com/article/asia-nvidia-earnings-us-stocks-71372f3476dd13c33d316819bf902b17

Investopedia. (2025, November 20). Markets News, Nov. 20, 2025: Major Stock Indexes Post Massive Losses as Early Nvidia-Led Rally Fades. https://www.investopedia.com/dow-jones-today-11202025-11853411

The Guardian. (2025, November 20). US added 119,000 jobs in September in report delayed by federal shutdown. https://www.theguardian.com/business/economics

Al Jazeera. (2025, November 20). Nvidia forecasts Q4 revenue above estimates despite AI bubble concerns. https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/

The Atlantic Council. (2025, November 20). Trump and MBS have big ambitions for the Middle East. https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/content-series/inflection-points/trump-and-mbs-have-big-ambitions-for-the-middle-east-bold-action-must-follow/

 

January 27, 2026 

The market is on edge as the Federal Reserve’s January policy meeting gets underway today. After a strong Monday session where major U.S. equity indices, including the S&P 500 and Dow, finished higher, sentiment remains mixed ahead of key economic data and policy signals. Spot gold has climbed to record highs above $5,100 per ounce on strong safe-haven demand and dollar weakness, reflecting persistent geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainties rather than just Federal Reserve expectations.

Attention today is firmly on the Fed’s decision, with markets widely expecting the federal funds rate to be held steady at current levels. Commentary from analysts suggests markets will be watching the Fed’s outlook on inflation and growth closely, especially during Chair Jerome Powell’s press engagement following the announcement. Markets are pricing in that the central bank will remain cautious rather than aggressively shift policy in either direction this week.

U.S. Treasury yields and the dollar have shown volatility as traders balance expectations for monetary policy with broader global risks. While yields have not moved uniformly, bond markets continue to signal caution ahead of the Fed statement and upcoming Treasury auctions.

Credit markets are displaying resilience, and corporate bond spreads have tightened in recent sessions, suggesting fixed-income investors are not yet pricing in a severe downturn. Some banking stocks have seen share weakness due to concerns about interest income and credit quality, but this is part of broader sector rotation rather than a systemic credit crisis. 

In the tech sector, themes of artificial intelligence investment continue to support valuations, with infrastructure and cloud-related plays drawing fresh capital even as cyclical sectors face headwinds. Despite macro uncertainty, many analysts point to strong earnings expectations as a key driver behind equity strength this earnings season. 

For consumers and markets alike, the January Conference Board Consumer Confidence index will be a focus today. Expectations are that the report will provide insight into household sentiment amid a resilient job market and moderating, though persistent, inflation pressures. This figure will help assess whether consumer spending remains a stabilizing force for U.S. economic growth.

Markets remain fundamentally uncertain and reactive rather than directional. The coexistence of record gold prices alongside solid equity performance suggests investors are balancing risk assets with defensive positions. Over the next 48 hours, the main risks revolve around communication clarity from policymakers, incoming economic data, and how markets interpret the Fed’s stance on inflation and growth.

 

References

Forex.com. (2026, January 26). S&P 500 Forecast: SPX rises ahead of Mag 7 earnings & FOMC decision this week. https://www.forex.com/en-ca/news-and-analysis/s-p-500-forecast-spx-rises-ahead-of-mag-7-earnings-fomc-decision-this-week/

Invesco. (2026, January 26). Four key market signals to watch. https://www.invesco.com/us/en/insights/market-signals-investors-watch.html

Investing.com. (2026, January 26). Trump speech and consumer confidence highlight Tuesday’s economic calendar. https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/trump-speech-and-consumer-confidence-highlight-tuesdays-economic-calendar-93CH-4465810

Kiplinger. (2026, January 26). January Fed Meeting: Live Updates and Commentary. https://www.kiplinger.com/investing/live/january-fed-meeting-live-updates-and-commentary

Manila Times. (2026, January 27). US stocks rise as gold hits another record and the dollar’s value sinks again. https://www.manilatimes.net/2026/01/27/business/foreign-business/us-stocks-rise-as-gold-hits-another-record-and-the-dollars-value-sinks-again/2265644

Morningstar. (2026, January 14). Financials Down After BofA, Wells, Citi Earnings — Financials Roundup. https://www.morningstar.com/news/dow-jones/202601148751/financials-down-after-bofa-wells-citi-earnings-financials-roundup

The Jakarta Post. (2026, January 27). Stocks up as earnings hopes offset Trump’s Korea tariff move, dollar wobbles. http://www.thejakartapost.com/business/2026/01/27/stocks-up-as-earnings-hopes-offset-trumps-korea-tariff-move-dollar-wobbles.html

December 18, 2025

As the final trading days of 2025 approach, the traditionally anticipated “Santa Claus Rally” has lost momentum amid growing investor caution. While the S&P 500 remains near record levels, the strong upward impulse seen in November has moderated. A combination of a volatile labor market report, mixed signals from the Federal Reserve, and a rotation away from high-valuation growth stocks has made investors more reluctant to increase exposure heading into the holiday period.

A central theme this week has been a reassessment of the so-called “AI trade.” Several major semiconductor and enterprise software stocks experienced renewed selling pressure on Wednesday, contributing to a 1.8% decline in the Nasdaq, its weakest session in several weeks. Investor sentiment appears to be shifting as market participants scrutinize whether current capital expenditure commitments can translate into near-term revenue growth. Oracle shares fell more than 5% following reports that financing for a large-scale AI data center project had been delayed, highlighting the increasing focus on funding discipline and return on investment. This shift in sentiment weighed on the broader sector, including Nvidia and Broadcom, reinforcing the view that future valuations will depend more heavily on realized cash flows rather than projected capacity expansion.

On the macroeconomic side, the Federal Reserve’s transition toward a more accommodative stance has been less straightforward than markets initially anticipated. The Fed implemented a 25-basis-point rate cut last week, lowering the target range to 3.50%–3.75%, but the response across asset classes has been muted. Long-term interest rates, in particular, have remained elevated, with the 10-year Treasury yield holding above 4.15%. This divergence suggests that bond investors remain cautious about inflation persistence and fiscal risks, even as the Fed seeks to support economic activity amid a labor market showing signs of gradual softening, with unemployment edging up to 4.4%.

Geopolitical considerations are also contributing to the cautious tone. While the “Kuala Lumpur Truce” reduced the immediate risk of renewed tariff escalation between the U.S. and China, broader strategic tensions persist. Recent reporting has drawn attention to China’s expanding role in maritime security operations in parts of Africa and the Indian Ocean, developments that could have longer-term implications for trade routes and regional stability. At the same time, China’s economy appears to have exceeded earlier 2025 growth expectations, with nominal GDP approaching an estimated $19.8 trillion, supported by strong exports in high-tech manufacturing sectors such as electric vehicles, robotics, and renewable energy technologies.


Markets appear to be undergoing a period of cautious reallocation rather than outright risk aversion. Investor capital is rotating away from the most speculative segments of the AI complex and toward assets more closely tied to current economic activity, including energy, where oil prices rose modestly after the U.S. administration moved to restrict Venezuelan tanker operations. With key inflation data due shortly, volatility is likely to remain elevated through year-end. Much of the easy gains of 2025 may already be realized, suggesting that market performance in 2026 will depend more on earnings resilience and margin discipline than on multiple expansion alone.

References

December 9, 2025

The global economic narrative today is shaped by renewed momentum in United States–India trade talks, set against new data confirming the structural resilience of China’s export machine, even as U.S. tariffs continue to weigh on Sino-U.S. trade. 

A delegation from the United States, led by Deputy U.S. Trade Representative Rick Switzer, is scheduled to meet counterparts in New Delhi from December 10–11, 2025, to begin discussions on the first phase of a proposed bilateral trade agreement. While some Indian officials have signalled optimism about finalising an initial deal by year-end, sources stress that this round may serve more as a preliminary or exploratory session rather than a formal negotiation. The broader ambition remains to reach the goals outlined under Mission 500, boosting bilateral trade to US $500 billion by 2030. 

China’s Trade Surplus Hits Record: Meanwhile, China’s goods trade surplus has exceeded US $1 trillion for the first time ever (first 11 months of 2025), according to customs data, marking a substantial increase from 2024’s total of about US $992 billion. 

In November, Chinese exports rebounded 5.9% year-on-year while imports rose only 1.9%, yielding a single-month surplus of roughly US $112 billion. Though exports to the United States fell sharply, nearly 29% in November, China seems to have offset much of the loss by diversifying export markets toward regions such as Southeast Asia, Europe, Australia, and beyond. This outcome underscores the limits of tariffs alone in curbing China’s global export reach.

The US–India negotiations come at a critical juncture. Facing rising competition in global supply chains, India may view a trade deal with the U.S. as a way to solidify its role as an alternative manufacturing and export hub, especially amid China’s continued dominance in exports. Yet, whether this “first tranche” will materialize as a binding agreement by year-end, or remain preliminary, is still uncertain. On the China side, although the trade-surplus milestone is impressive, analysts caution that long-term vulnerabilities remain, including weak domestic demand, overreliance on external markets, and rising geopolitical scrutiny from other trading partners.

References

February 2026 recruitment data from Wave shows a strong early-quarter uptick in activity, with job postings up about 39 % compared with late 2025, alongside increased applications and placements — a sign of renewed hiring momentum in several markets.

Despite this overall surge, imbalances persist across industries. Consistent with broader labour-market reports, health-care hiring continues to be a standout driver of job growth, reflecting chronic staffing shortages and rising demand, while other sectors are expanding more slowly.

Recruiters at firms such as Van Der Consulting face evolving challenges around verifying candidate skills for highly technical and fast-changing roles, particularly in AI and emerging tech areas. According to LinkedIn’s January 2026 Labor Market Report, the global job market remains sluggish in some regions with job seekers outnumbering openings and employers placing greater emphasis on skill-based hiring — especially where advanced technical skills intersect with human-centric strengths like communication and problem-solving.

Industry research also supports the idea that workers with AI-related skills continue to command a substantial wage premium. The PwC 2025 Global AI Jobs Barometer found that jobs requiring AI capabilities are associated with an average wage premium of around 56 % compared with similar roles without those skills, and that demand for AI-proficient talent continues to outpace other job growth.

Overall, the labour market in early 2026 is marked by imbalances between sectors, ongoing shortages of specialised talent, and growing returns for workers who combine technical AI skills with strong interpersonal and problem-solving abilities