Markets look through de-escalation — for now

 

Recent headlines around Greenland and US–Europe tensions initially injected volatility into markets. While President Trump has since stepped back from immediate tariff action and ruled out the use of force, investors are increasingly focused on what comes next rather than what has just been avoided.

 

As ever in geopolitics, the immediate noise can obscure the more important question for markets: is this episode now resolved, or merely entering a different phase?

 

Escalation often opens negotiations — not closes them

 

Greenland has featured in US strategic thinking for years. What changed recently was not the underlying issue, but the intensity of the rhetoric. That escalation now appears to have eased, following discussions between President Trump and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte around a potential “framework” for cooperation.

 

Markets recognise that this framework is unlikely to represent a finalised agreement. Instead, it looks more like the opening stage of a negotiation process — one that reduces near-term tail risks, but does not eliminate them.

 

This pattern is familiar. In previous episodes:

 

History suggests escalation is often a means of forcing negotiations onto US terms — not the final destination.

 

The risk: volatility during the negotiation phase

 

While the immediate risk of abrupt escalation has diminished, markets are conscious that negotiations themselves can be messy. Threats that have been paused can re-emerge if talks stall, domestic political incentives change, or leverage is reapplied.

 

This helps explain why markets have stabilised rather than fully reversed recent moves.

 

Crucially, this still does not resemble a full-scale risk-off episode. Instead, markets appear to be pricing a prolonged period of uncertainty rather than an outright breakdown in US–European relations.

 

A framework is not an endpoint

 

The historical precedent suggests that US strategic objectives in the Arctic do not require a transfer of sovereignty. Past agreements between the US and Denmark already demonstrate that security, access, and influence can be achieved within existing territorial arrangements.

 

A modernised framework — expanding US operational presence while preserving European territorial integrity — would offer a face-saving outcome for all sides. But markets understand that getting from framework to final agreement takes time, and that the negotiation process itself carries risks.

 

What if the situation re-escalates?

 

While markets have welcomed the recent step back from immediate tariffs and the explicit ruling out of force, investors are not treating this as resolution. The “framework” discussed with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte is widely seen as the opening phase of negotiations rather than a finalised agreement.

 

Negotiation processes of this kind are inherently fragile. If talks stall, domestic political incentives shift, or leverage is reapplied, many of the threats that have been paused could quickly re-emerge.

 

Importantly, re-escalation would not need to take the form of outright confrontation. Even the renewed use of tariff threats or economic pressure could be sufficient to revive volatility and reinforce recent market trends.

 

In such a scenario:

 

From a portfolio perspective, this argues for treating recent de-escalation as a pause rather than a conclusion.

 

Top picks

Product Ticker Rationale
WisdomTree Short USD Long EUR USEU Tactical position in the event of a gradual shift away from the Dollar.
WisdomTree Physical Gold - EUR Daily Hedged
WisdomTree Physical Gold - GBP Daily Hedged
GBSE
GBSP
Hedging Dollar exposure in gold investments to fully capture the opportunity in the anti-fragile metal.
WisdomTree Europe Defence UCITS ETF WDEF Europe is operating in a less predictable world where reliance on the US for defence is being reassessed. Greenland has become an unexpected flashpoint in transatlantic politics, and it highlights a broader shift.
WisdomTree Europe Equity Income UCITS ETF EEI Fund has low aggregate revenue exposure to the US (11.2%), which may make it less affected by potential trade tensions.

Tariffs, negotiation leverage and the Supreme Court constraint

 

An important — and underappreciated — dimension of this risk is the unresolved legal status of US tariff powers.

 

The US Supreme Court has not yet issued a final ruling on the legality of the current tariff regime, having delayed a decision several times. While the Court is not adjudicating on any specific geopolitical dispute, it is weighing a much broader question: whether Congress has delegated excessive unilateral economic authority to the executive branch.

 

This matters because tariffs sit at the heart of the negotiation toolkit. If talks around Greenland or broader US–European relations were to re-escalate, tariff threats would likely re-emerge as a primary source of leverage. However, their credibility increasingly depends on how the Court ultimately defines the limits of executive power.

 

Highly visible episodes of economic coercion — whether through tariffs, sanctions, or diplomatic pressure — can sharpen the institutional stakes for justices assessing where constitutional boundaries should lie. In that sense, geopolitical pressure tactics may indirectly influence how the Court views the risks of unconstrained executive authority.

 

A potential circuit breaker for markets

 

Markets are therefore navigating two overlapping uncertainties:

 

If the Court were to uphold broad tariff powers, tariff threats would retain their potency as a negotiation tool, increasing the risk of renewed volatility during talks.

 

By contrast, a ruling that meaningfully constrains tariff authority would act as a circuit breaker. Even if rhetoric were to escalate, investors could take comfort in the presence of institutional guardrails limiting how far trade tensions can realistically go.

 

Such an outcome would likely support US and global equities, favour growth over value in the US, ease pressure on the dollar, and reduce — though not eliminate — the geopolitical risk premium embedded in gold and silver.

 

Until that legal clarity emerges, markets are likely to remain sensitive to renewed pressure tactics, even in a world where force has been ruled out and negotiations are formally underway.

 

1 WisdomTree, FactSet, as of 31/12/2025.

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