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The Weekly Five

Capital Markets Resemble a Saint Bernard

January 16, 2026

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Eric Freedman

Eric Freedman

Chief Investment Officer, Northern Trust Wealth Management

While wide-ranging headlines continue, capital markets shrugged off everything from Federal Reserve subpoenas to geopolitical conflict in Iran to proposed domestic credit card regulatory legislation, which followed interest rate caps from the week prior. An analogy we like to use is that sometimes markets act like a proverbial Saint Bernard, stoically traversing despite repeated pulls on its fur. Eventually, those pulls force a reaction, but asset performance this week — including currencies, global equities, credit and other areas we monitor — suggest calm. However, we do not want to confuse calm with complacency should underlying fundamentals change.

To provide additional context around our market outlook, I joined Bloomberg Surveillance for a recent interview, where we discussed our perspective on the future trajectory of equity markets, the biggest risks we see in 2026, and how recent policy moves, corporate earnings, growth and inflation play into our baseline assumptions. 

1

This week had numerous headlines, so why didn’t markets seem to react to them?

The week kicked off with a Sunday evening U.S. Federal Reserve announcement about subpoenas received. As the week progressed, Iranian tensions continued, the administration signaled continued interest in Greenland, and President Trump followed up on proposed credit card interest rate cap assertions by backing a bill that would subject card issuers to more regulation while lowering merchant costs. Although markets have had a lot to digest and broad-market indices seemed not to move in aggregate, we are encouraged that market responses have emerged just below the surface. We would have concerns if markets adopted a “Teflon-esque” reaction function, which we have seen at other historical junctures (e.g., the dot.com bubble and subsequent fallout). In general, broad markets, as captured by the S&P 500 or major bond indices, react to phenomena that would alter consumption, trade, corporate spending, or market functioning — and none of the headlines appear to deeply impact those categories. To be sure, individual headlines and their collective sum are important and bear further, albeit brief, mention. We will devote a more fulsome response to the Fed matter later in this piece.

Top-of-mind geopolitical tensions like Venezuela, Greenland, Iran or simmering issues with Russia/Ukraine, China/Taiwan and a host of other elements are what we continue to term “edgeless,” or difficult to forecast in terms of resolution timing, perceived economic impact and resultant market reaction. These events carry significant human considerations, and each situation carries the opportunity to further isolate major powers and redirect trade (note that President Trump hinted at tariffs to entice a deal on Greenland today). Edgeless phenomena are often treated as reactionary outcomes by markets: Buying and selling will occur once the next stage of a given event happens, but, for now, the broader impacts appear contained. U.S./China trade relations are the most significant in the near and long term, and markets are likely more focused on pending Supreme Court legislation outcomes than seemingly isolated events that do not yet alter core economic trends.

Potential credit card legislation and interest rate caps carry more potential economic weight given how consumption-driven most western economies are — especially the United States. This week, several credit card companies and banks that issue credit cards have seen negative share price reactions. However, given the hurdles to pass credit card legislation, strong vocal opposition by select banks on pending legislation, and what it may mean for bank lending appetites, share prices have recovered about half of what they lost earlier in the week. 

2

Are the concerns around Fed independence overhyped as it relates to capital market implications?

Fed headlines remain in the spotlight, especially following Sunday’s announcement that the Department of Justice served subpoenas to Fed officials. With our consistent nonpartisan perspective, investor perceptions regarding market functioning are correlated with market participation. For an analogy, consider how you or I feel about our local farmer’s market. If we felt that prices were set unfairly, food quality undercut standards, or the hours of operation were erratic and undependable, we wouldn’t go back and would seek our vegetables from other sources. Without projecting bias, U.S. capital markets remain the most liquid among global peers, and further U.S. government debt and currency issuance retains cornerstone status.

Even though its mandates are borne out of Congressional authority, the Fed is viewed as an independent entity serving the American people through promoting full employment, price stability and moderate long-term interest rates. Most market pundits focus on the first two mandates, but the third is arguably the most important as borrowing costs, both here and abroad, are set off of U.S. Treasury bonds. The Fed does not issue bonds, but their interest rate targets are key in pricing.

Fed policy is critical right now given more mixed economic trends. The Fed and its staff economists have a difficult task when setting interest rate policy; their policies require predictive thinking and acknowledging the lag between policy change announcements and their uptake in the economy. Any perceived interference or influence on Fed thinking risks implications for U.S. borrowing costs. While we do not think the subpoenas in and of themselves warrant immediate concern, markets keep receipts on aggregated concerns. 

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3

What have corporate earnings told us thus far about consumer health?

Quarterly earnings season spans several months and covers companies across the globe. Since consumers impact so many sectors and geographies, we hear several datapoints and prognostications about consumer activity. As we have discussed, despite comments about consumers en masse, consumers do not represent one monolithic entity but instead many micro subcomponents that vary by age, income, education level, location and other factors. Over the next few weeks, we will hear from sectors including leisure & hospitality, retailers, restaurants and others, and our job is to discern trends from anomalies and company-specific implications from true read-throughs.

Several large banks reported earnings this week, including those who issue credit cards and have large consumer loan books. What we heard corroborates our view that consumer spending and broad economic growth trends are likely more positive than consensus forecasts: Economists were too pessimistic on growth heading into 2025 and spent the year revising up their consumer activity estimates, but it appears they have more catchup to do. A few broad trends will require more microanalysis, but in general, we saw healthy loan growth, a slight improvement or little change in credit quality (as measured by charge-off trends for select firms that just reported earnings), and expanding credit card balances.

Last week, we provided comments on holiday spending trends, noting reasonably strong consumer spending aided by promotional activity and credit — especially buy now/pay later (BNPL) arrangements. The “buy now” part has happened with gift purchases into western holidays (with Lunar New Year activity coming later this winter), but the “pay later” part will be important as we gauge consumers’ ability to pay back and what their future appetites for both goods purchases and experiential activity will be as the year unfolds. Our economics team continues to see a gradual soft landing emerge, and this week’s earnings support that assertion. 

4

What have we learned about technology to date in earnings season?

It is early and most of the technology companies that make up the “Magnificent Seven” report earnings later in the quarter (Microsoft reports 1/28, Meta (formerly Facebook) 1/28, Tesla 1/28, Apple 1/29, Alphabet (formerly Google) 2/4, Amazon 2/6, and NVIDIA 2/25).  While we have a few weeks before some of the tech heavyweights report, we did get a key earnings report from Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM), which provides a meaningful read-through to the broader tech ecosystem.

Founded in 1987, TSM is a dedicated semiconductor foundry whose services and geographical reach have grown over time — North America represents 70% of revenue, so TSM provides insights into production. TSM manufactures semiconductors based on integrated circuit designs provided by their customers in addition to testing and other services. TSM had strong earnings and sales, beating estimates across most financial metrics.

The most important takeaway was TSM’s capital expenditure (capex) plans with management announcing up to $56 billion in capex this year, which is a 30% increase over 2025. They also cited plans to increase capex for the next three years. Markets cheered both the earnings as well as the capex plans, and related companies including semiconductor equipment stocks, such as Holland’s ASM Lithography, rose in sympathy. What we will be looking for is what underlies the capex increase. For example, is it sustainable demand from customers, agreements tied to the U.S.-Taiwanese trade deal announced Wednesday, preemptive spending in an increasingly competitive market, or an overextrapolation of true long-term demand? As you will hear from us throughout this year and beyond, we are actively gauging returns from artificial intelligence spend and how markets differentiate winners from losers in this environment.

5

This week, global credit spreads touched the lowest levels in nearly 20 years. What does that mean, and is it a source of concern?

First, let’s define credit spreads; Wall Street lingo that sounds more complicated than it is. In bond-market terms, a spread is the difference in yield between one bond and another bond that matures at the same time, with yield defined as the annual rate of cash flows a bond holder can expect to receive through maturity as a percentage of the total bond price, assuming the bond issuer makes good on their promised payments. Typically, spreads are computed using U.S. government bonds as the basis, such that a bond earns a yield premium over a U.S. Treasury bond of the same maturity.

So if I own a fictitious Acme Incorporated corporate bond that matures 10 years from today that yields 6.8%, and I compare it with the equivalent U.S. government bond, which in this case is the U.S. 10-year Treasury bond that yields 4.2%, the spread or difference in yields between the two bonds is 2.6%. That spread exists for lots of reasons, but mostly because the U.S. government can tax and has a military to back its sovereignty; Acme is a company and can neither tax nor field a military, and it promises to pay back bondholders as a function of its cash position and ability to translate product or service sales into liquidity for creditors (and worst case sell assets).

When credit spreads get very low, or tight, markets do not demand extra compensation for issuers like Acme or others. This situation occurs when the global economy remains in relatively good shape, company balance sheets are strong, debt issuance and demand have been steady, and default activity has been subdued. While these are all supportive conditions for low credit spreads, there is always a risk that companies see low credit spreads as an opportunity to issue more debt at less expensive levels. Like most things in financial markets, creditors and issuers can grow complacent: While the current environment appears to justify low global credit spreads, we are actively watching issuance and absorption trends along with economic fundamentals to gauge how sustainable current levels may be. 

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This document is a general communication being provided for informational and educational purposes only and is not meant to be taken as investment advice or a recommendation for any specific investment product or strategy. The information contained herein does not take your financial situation, investment objective or risk tolerance into consideration. Readers, including professionals, should under no circumstances rely upon this information as a substitute for their own research or for obtaining specific legal, accounting or tax advice from their own counsel. Any examples are hypothetical and for illustration purposes only. All investments involve risk and can lose value, the market value and income from investments may fluctuate in amounts greater than the market. All information discussed herein is current only as of the date of publication and is subject to change at any time without notice. Forecasts may not be realized due to a multitude of factors, including but not limited to, changes in economic conditions, corporate profitability, geopolitical conditions or inflation. This material has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but its accuracy, completeness and interpretation cannot be guaranteed. Northern Trust and its affiliates may have positions in, and may effect transactions in, the markets, contracts and related investments described herein, which positions and transactions may be in addition to, or different from, those taken in connection with the investments described herein.

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