Beyond Geopolitics: How Global Elections Could Reshape Market Volatility in 2026
After a year in which geopolitics dominated market narratives, political risk is broadening in 2026.
After a year in which geopolitics dominated market narratives, political risk is broadening in 2026.
The International Monetary Fund’s latest outlook paints a picture of a global economy that remains unexpectedly resilient.
The December employment report, released last Friday, painted a stark picture of the U.S. labor market.
While each precious metal has its own story, they share a common backdrop: a significantly weaker U.S. dollar.
Copper appears positioned for sustained price strength, but volatility will remain elevated.
A familiar question returns to Wall Street: will the traditional Santa Rally materialize this year?
Bitcoin has endured one of its most turbulent months of 2025, erasing all year-to-date gains.
Japanese PM Sanae Takaichi has made clear her administration’s preference for keeping interest rates low and avoiding a return to deflation.
Concerns persist that AI-related capital expenditures could collide with a softer labor market or slower global growth.
A blend of technical rebound and escalating geopolitical risk has reintroduced volatility to the oil market.