Financial analysis: A chaotic start to 2026

From the performance of the main indices in the US and Europe, one would think it has been a relatively calm and uneventful start to the year. In fact, the three main indices in the US have all registered positive performances, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average up by 1.7%, while the S&P 500 (after briefly surpassing the important psychological level of 7,000 points) and the NASDAQ ended the month with milder gains of 1.4% and 0.95% respectively.

It was also a positive month for all European equity indices with the exception of France’s CAC 40. Spanish and UK equities started the year as best performers with gains of 3.3% and 2.9% respectively in January. The Euro STOXX 50 index advanced by 2.7% in January, reaching a new all-time high of 6,067.50 points mid-month.

However, it was a truly chaotic month on various fronts, with severe geopolitical developments especially with respect to Venezuela, Greenland and Iran, President Donald Trump’s erratic policymaking, a currency and bond sell-off in Japan, and intense movements in the commodities market.

The major factor influencing commodity prices over the past few months has been the elevated macro uncertainty as a result of the various geopolitical developments. Traditionally, a weaker dollar sends commodity prices higher. The US dollar has indeed been on a decline as it dropped by over 13% against the euro in 2025.

However, the dramatic scale of the jump in commodity prices and subsequent declines in recent days has been truly historic. The price movements were amplified by the huge increase in popularity of precious metals-backed exchange traded funds (ETFs) over recent months as the spectacular performance attracted numerous speculators, including retail investors.

Last Friday, January 30, was one of the most chaotic days for precious metals in decades as there was a historic collapse in prices. The announcement that President Trump has nominated Kevin Warsh to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve, who is expected to replace Jerome Powell in May, contributed to very sharp declines in gold and silver prices as the value of the US dollar rose.

Although the potential new head of the US central bank is regarded as an advocate of lower interest rates, he is seen as being less aggressive than some other potential nominees, thereby helping the US dollar to regain from the continued downturn seen in recent weeks.

“The events taking place in recent weeks should serve as a lesson to novice investors”

Silver, which had registered a remarkable rally of around 148% in 2025, plunged more than 30% last Friday – its steepest daily decline since March 1980.

On the same day, gold also dropped by more than 9%, the steepest one-day drop in spot gold since 1983. But despite last week’s downturn, gold has registered its strongest  month­ly ⁠gain ​since 1999, with an increase of over 20%.

Gold and silver came under further selling pressure on  Monday and extended the sell-off that started on Friday.

The sharp movements in gold and silver prompted the intervention of several investment bankers and opinion writers to share their views on the outlook for the year. Most commentators opined that the main drivers of the gold rally remain intact, including strong central bank demand and lower real interest rates.

Short-term movements in the US dollar will not only be based on ongoing releases of economic data and speculation on how many interest cuts will take place this year, but also on official comments from President Trump, who last week practically endorsed the recent decline in the dollar.

Among the unprecedented moves across commodities, the earnings season is now well under way in the US, UK and Europe. Many of the largest US technology companies forming the “Magnificent 7” have already reported their results for 2025.

The contrasting reaction and share price movements to the announcements by Meta – which climbed by almost 10% – and Microsoft – which experienced its steepest daily decline in six years – added further volatility to the events that took place last week. Amazon and Alphabet will report their earnings this week, while Nvidia is due to publish its results on February 25.

The artificial intelligence theme will undoubtedly remain a key driver for equity performance in the weeks and months ahead. From the earnings reports published to date, it is clear that capital spending on AI continues to grow, and there is evident progress towards monetising AI applications.

The events taking place in recent weeks should serve as a lesson to some of the many novice investors regularly ‘following’ international market movements to always be extremely wary of ‘investing’ in popular or fashionable asset classes, sectors or names.

Simply because the mainstream media regularly mentions popular asset classes, sectors or individual companies on the grounds of a spectacular performance that creates interesting headlines, should not result in them being considered as part of a long-term investment portfolio.

There is a big difference between investing and speculating. Investors must always understand the nature and type of investments they are acquiring and whether these truly fit into their overall objective.

Rizzo, Farrugia & Co. (Stockbrokers) Ltd, ‘Rizzo Farrugia’, is a member of the Malta Stock Exchange and licensed by the Malta Financial Services Authority. This report has been prepared in accordance with legal requirements. It has not been disclosed to the company/s herein mentioned before its publication. It is based on public information only and is published solely for informational purposes and is not to be construed as a solicitation or an offer to buy or sell any securities or related financial instruments. The author and other relevant persons may not trade in the securities to which this report relates (other than executing unsolicited client orders) until such time as the recipients of this report have had a reasonable opportunity to act thereon. Rizzo Farrugia, its directors, the author of this report, other employees or Rizzo Farrugia on behalf of its clients, have holdings in the securities herein mentioned and may at any time make purchases and/or sales in them as principal or agent, and may also have other business relationships with the company/s. Stock markets are volatile and subject to fluctuations which cannot be reasonably foreseen. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. Neither Rizzo Farrugia, nor any of its directors or employees accept any liability for any loss or damage arising out of the use of all or any part thereof and no representation or warranty is provided in respect of the reliability of the information contained in this report.

© 2026 Rizzo, Farrugia & Co. (Stockbrokers) Ltd. All rights reserved.

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Event for women entrepreneurs

Next Article

The new Abe-nomics: how Japan and the US are rewriting the rules of debt

Related Posts