January 08

USA PRE MARKED : Technical Scans for Thursday, January 8

Briefing: U.S. equity futures are under pressure heading into the session, extending the uneasy tone that followed Wednesday’s selloff.

S&P 500 futures are down 16 points (-23 bp),

Dow futures are off 174 points (-35 bp),

Nasdaq futures are lower by 74 points (-33 bp),

and Russell 2000 futures are leading to the downside with a 44 bp decline.

The overnight weakness reflects a mix of policy-driven uncertainty and profit-taking after a strong start to the year.

Markets continue to digest President Trump’s latest economic interventions—most notably proposals to bar institutional investors from buying single-family homes and to restrict dividends and buybacks at defense contractors—while also reacting to choppy global tech price action and renewed geopolitical noise tied to Venezuela and Russia sanctions. Add in soft price action across metals and crypto, and risk appetite is clearly on pause rather than gone.

Europe is following the U.S. lower, with major Eurozone indices down roughly 20–30 bp.

Sector performance is defensive in character: consumer staples, banks, insurance, defense contractors, healthcare, and utilities are outperforming, while energy, retail, technology, autos, staffing, and basic resources lag. U.K. grocers were a notable weak spot, with Associated British Foods and Tesco both under pressure on earnings-related disappointment.

Defense stocks, however, are bid across the region after Trump floated a $1.5 trillion Pentagon budget proposal, reinforcing the idea that Wednesday’s selloff in the group may have been more headline-driven than fundamental.

Asian markets mostly closed lower, led by Japan, where the Nikkei fell 1.63% and the Topix slid 0.77%. Hong Kong equities also declined, with the Hang Seng down 1.17%, while mainland China was mixed and relatively resilient.

Technology was the main drag across the region: Baidu fell 3.3%, Lenovo dropped 5.6%, SoftBank Group slid 7.6%, and Tokyo Electron lost 4%. Samsung Electronics declined about 1.2% in South Korea despite reporting strong preliminary Q4 results, a reaction that stood out.

The message from Asia was clear: even good numbers are no longer enough when expectations are stretched and sentiment is fragile.

On the macro front, Treasuries are largely unchanged, with the 10-year holding around 4.16%.

The dollar is modestly firmer, with the DXY up about 10 bp. Commodities are mixed: Brent crude is rebounding roughly 75 bp after two days of declines,

while gold (-60 bp), silver (-275 bp), and bitcoin (-135 bp) are all under pressure.

Political risk remains an undercurrent, with the Powell succession race tightening—Kevin Hassett and Kevin Warsh are both priced at 39% on Polymarket—and renewed attention on sanctions against Russia, which could ripple through energy and defense markets.

Earnings and corporate news are providing plenty of single-stock volatility. Samsung’s strong preliminary Q4 print—sales of KRW93T and operating income of KRW20T—was met with selling, reinforcing concerns that optimism around memory and AI hardware may be fully priced. I

Defense stocks are a focal point again this morning.

After being hit hard Wednesday on Trump’s executive order restricting dividends and buybacks, the group rebounded sharply in premarket trading following his call for a dramatic increase in military spending. Names such as Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, RTX, and General Dynamics are all seeing renewed interest. The takeaway is volatility, not clarity—policy risk is now part of the valuation framework for the sector.

In terms of events to watch, the U.S. economic calendar is light, with jobless claims and productivity data unlikely to move markets materially unless there’s a surprise. Treasury Secretary nominee Scott Bessent is scheduled to speak, which could generate headlines. More important is the policy backdrop: expected executive actions on housing affordability, developments on Russia sanctions, and ongoing legal scrutiny of tariffs all have the potential to inject fresh volatility.

Stepping back, the broader trend still looks like a market that is consolidating after strong gains rather than one that is breaking down.

Sentiment is cooling at the margins—the AAII bull-bear spread narrowed to +12.5%—but bulls still outnumber bears. The recent pullback feels more like a reminder that perfection is priced in than a signal of a regime shift.

For now, investors are rotating defensively, questioning stretched tech valuations, and relearning an old lesson: policy headlines matter, especially when they arrive faster than earnings revisions.