New York, Jan 21, 2026, 06:08 EST — Premarket
- Following Wall Street’s steepest drop in months, Dow futures gained about 0.2%.
- Markets are responding to President Donald Trump’s remarks at Davos, coming after fresh tariff threats aimed at Europe over Greenland.
- U.S. housing data arrives Wednesday. On Thursday, expect GDP figures and weekly jobless claims, all before next week’s Fed meeting.
Dow Jones Industrial Average futures inched higher Wednesday morning, signaling a tentative bounce after the benchmark suffered its steepest drop in three months on tariff concerns and a rush to safer assets. (AP News)
The Dow plunged 870.74 points, or 1.76%, closing Tuesday at 48,488.59. The selloff followed President Donald Trump’s threat to impose new tariffs on imports from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Finland, and Britain if the U.S. fails to secure a deal to buy Greenland. Wall Street’s volatility gauge, the VIX, ended at its highest level since late November. Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq slipped beneath their 50-day moving averages—key technical thresholds. “I’m not at the point yet where I’m willing to say … this is going to precipitate a correction,” said Jamie Cox, managing partner at Harris Financial Group. (Reuters)
Overseas, the “Sell America” trade—essentially cutting back on U.S. assets—kept momentum after a broad selloff in stocks, the dollar, and Treasuries. Mantas Vanagas, senior economist at Westpac, called investors’ retreat a sign they see the U.S. as an “unreliable partner.” Chris Weston, Pepperstone’s head of research, pointed to a key question ahead: will bargain hunters step up, or will fresh developments drag risk appetite down again? Meanwhile, the European Union has scheduled an emergency summit in Brussels for Thursday. (Reuters)
Gold prices shot above $4,800 an ounce, pushing deeper into record territory amid rising trader caution. Jamie Dutta, market analyst at Nemo.money, highlighted the “Greenland crisis” as a significant driver. John Meyer of SP Angel is tracking gold’s push toward $5,000 an ounce but cautioned that momentum might stall if ETF demand wanes. Reuters also pointed out that investors are closely watching a Supreme Court case tied to Trump’s bid to remove Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook—a move that could test the Fed’s independence. (Reuters)
The Dow’s mix of industrial and multinational companies makes it especially vulnerable to changes in trade policy and abrupt hits to business confidence. Tariffs drive up input costs, compress margins, and throw global supply chains into disarray — challenges that rarely hit simultaneously but often linger for extended periods.
Traders are watching U.S. residential construction numbers due at 8:30 a.m. ET, with the National Association of Realtors’ pending home sales index following at 10:00 a.m. ET. On Thursday, the Bureau of Economic Analysis will release its “GDP 3rd Release” alongside weekly initial jobless claims, both also at 8:30 a.m. ET. Personal income figures and the PCE deflator — the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge — are lined up for Jan. 29. (Federal Reserve Bank of New York)
The Federal Reserve will hold its next policy meeting on Jan. 27-28. The decision comes out at 2:00 p.m. ET on Jan. 28, followed by a press conference at 2:30 p.m. ET. (Federal Reserve)
Netflix beat expectations with its fourth-quarter revenue and earnings, but shares listed in Frankfurt still fell about 7%. The drop followed the company’s decision to halt share buybacks to preserve cash amid its bidding war for Warner Bros Discovery. (Reuters)
The odds of a Dow rebound look slim. If tariff talks shift from vague threats to concrete timetables, or if long-term yields edge back toward recent highs, any bounce could disappear quickly, dragging cyclical stocks in the index down with it.
Investors are focused on Trump’s Davos speech Wednesday, searching for signs of easing—or escalating—tensions. Then, eyes turn to Thursday’s housing data, GDP numbers, and claims report. All this leads up to the Fed’s Jan. 27-28 meeting, poised to be the next key catalyst for the Dow.