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TACO Wednesday and the great market exhale

The great market exhale

Markets did not so much trade on Wednesday as they collectively unclenched. After a bruising bout of headline-induced indigestion, every major asset class caught a bid at once. Stocks up. Bonds up. Gold up, then cooling. Crypto rebounding. Crude firming. Even the dollar found its feet. It was one of those rare sessions where the entire risk spectrum moved in the same direction, not because fundamentals suddenly changed, but because a large geopolitical tail risk was pushed back into the long grass.

The spark was pure Trump. After days of market fretting over Greenland turning from diplomatic curiosity into tariff ammunition, the president arrived in Davos and did what markets have quietly come to expect. He de-escalated. No force. No February tariffs. A framework purportedly for small land parcels in Greenland? A future deal?Enough ambiguity to preserve leverage, but enough reassurance to release the pressure valve. In trader terms, the market went from pricing a live grenade to pricing an option that expires sometime later.

That shift alone was enough to flip positioning. What had looked like the early stages of a Sell America wobble reversed into a full spectrum relief rally. The S and P posted its biggest gain in months, every sector rose, energy printed fresh highs, and small caps extended their dominance in a way that screamed positioning squeeze rather than fresh conviction. This was not long-term capital reallocating. This was a quick gamma scramble to get flat.

Rates told the same story. Treasury yields slipped even as equities ripped, helped by a simultaneous calming in Japan’s bond market where the long end briefly stopped screaming. The combination mattered. Japan had been exporting duration stress to the rest of the world, and once that feedback loop softened, global fixed income was free to breathe. A solid twenty year auction did the rest. The message was simple. This was never about absolute yield levels. It was about speed and fear. Slow it down, and demand reappears.

Gold played its usual role as the lie detector. It spiked early as nerves peaked, printed another record, then faded once Trump ruled out force and tariffs were shelved. That intraday arc said more than any strategist quote. Gold was not rejecting risk. It was hedging political credibility. When the rhetoric softened, some of that insurance came off, but the metal still closed higher, a reminder that trust has not been fully restored.

Equities beneath the surface were anything but calm. The tape was jumpy, liquidity thin, and the market acutely sensitive to every headline tick. One Denmark rejection headline knocked stocks lower into the European close, only to be obliterated minutes later by another Trump reversal. This was not price discovery. It was headline roulette in a market where depth has gone missing. When ETFs dominate volume, and the top of the book is shallow, prices gap first and think later.

Options positioning poured fuel on the fire. Dealers were short call gamma and long put gamma, a setup that amplifies rallies once they start and cushions volatility spikes just enough to keep traders leaning the wrong way. January vol expiration cleared some clutter, but the broader message remains. Below certain levels, downside accelerates fast. Above them, the market can levitate on positioning alone. Wednesday landed firmly in the latter camp.

The irony is that this chaos arrived in the middle of a strong earnings season. Most companies are beating estimates, yet their shares are being punished for it, a classic sign of a market that has already priced perfection and is now trading macro noise instead of micro results. That disconnect explains why rallies feel frantic, and pullbacks feel personal. Investors are overallocated, underhedged, and emotionally reactive.

Zooming out, none of the structural issues went away. Greenland is still unresolved. Tariffs remain a tool that can be picked up or put down at will. Global investors are still quietly diversifying away from extreme US concentration. And geopolitical risk still commands a higher premium than it did a year ago. What changed on Wednesday was not the destination, but the timing. The imminent risk was deferred, and that was enough to spark a relief rally.

If this all feels familiar, it should. We have seen this movie before. Frameworks. Future deals. Tactical retreats dressed up as strategy. Markets sell the threat and buy the climb down, every single time, until they do not. For now, the playbook remains intact. Volatility spikes are opportunities, not signals of regime change. Weakness driven by headlines tends to fade once the shouting stops.

The lesson from TACO Wednesday is not that risk is gone. It is that markets are still trading Trump in real time, with all the whiplash that implies. In an environment like this, chasing rips is expensive, dips are conditional gifts, and liquidity is the hidden risk everyone underestimates. The great exhale felt good, but no one should confuse it for a return to serenity.

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

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