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Morning Bid: Great stock rotation rolls on

By Thomson Reuters Jan 14, 2026 | 11:31 PM

A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Kevin Buckland

The shift out of the high-flying tech stocks that set the pace for last year’s ‍record global equity rallies gathered more steam, to the benefit of cyclical and value shares.

Case in point: Japan’s tech-heavy Nikkei dropped 1% at the time of this narrative, after spiking to an all-time peak in the prior session. By contrast, the broader Topix index extended its record ‌climb with a 0.4% advance.

It’s analogous to how ‌the Russell 2000 is outpacing the S&P 500 currently, gaining 0.7% overnight while the larger index lost 0.5%.

Capital.com analyst Kyle Rodda contended that while big drops this year for heavyweights like Apple, Meta and Microsoft can ​make for some ominous-looking declines in overall Wall Street indexes, the right way to view it is a healthy broadening ‍out of the market’s strength.

For Europe, futures ​portend an extension of the record highs set ​on Wednesday in Britain and other parts of the region.

Geopolitical risks are ‍on the wane somewhat after U.S. President Donald Trump said he’d heard of a halt to the killing of protesters in Iran, lessening the chances of U.S. military action.

That saw crude oil pull back sharply from multi-month highs, and helped bring safe-haven ‍gold down from an all-time peak.

Trump also de-escalated tensions with the Fed, saying he has no plan to fire Chair Jerome Powell, despite the ‍criminal investigation into ‍cost overruns for renovations of Fed headquarters.

However, Trump ​is not ceding any ground over his bid ​to ⁠buy Greenland, reiterating that the U.S. needs it ‌even as the foreign ministers of Greenland and Denmark left a high-stakes meeting in Washington by repeating that the autonomous Danish territory is not for sale.

Key developments that could influence markets on Thursday:

-UK GDP estimate, services, industrial production, manufacturing output

-France, Spain, Sweden CPI

-Germany full-year GDP

-Euro zone industrial production

(Editing ⁠by Shri Navaratnam)