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The shift from fundamentals to “belief-based investing” creates a market lubricated by emotion, especially in risk assets with no tangible earnings or cash flow drivers. In the end, fundamental and economic realities take hold, and speculative narratives fail to hold.

What matters in U.S. and global markets today

A slowing of rebalancing flows could eat at a big source of bond-market demand.

S&P Global Ratings said China's primary real estate sales will likely drop by between 10% to 14% this year, worse than the 5% to 8% decline for 2026 sales the firm predicted back in October. "This is a downturn so entrenched that only the government has capacity to absorb the excess inventory," the analysts said in a note.

Sanae Takaichi wins the strongest electoral mandate in Japan since World War II.

Seven out of 11 S&P 500 Index (SPX) sector ETFs were showing positive returns as of last Thursday. The MoneyShow Table of the Day shows that technology is bringing up the rear this year, down 5.7%.

As of Feb. 9, 2026, three stocks in the utilities sector could be flashing a real warning to investors who value momentum as a key criteria in their trading decisions.

Goldman Sachs analysts led by Gail Hafif says some big influential CTAs are ready to push the sell button on U.S. stocks, especially if the S&P 500 sinks further.

Markets this week focus on jobs and inflation data, Fed speakers, and major earnings as investors assess the outlook for U.S. stocks.

While the U.S. stock market performance on Friday, February 6, seemingly put a bullish end to a volatile week with the S&P 500 recording its biggest one-session gain since May 2025, Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) issued a stark warning that investors are not yet out of the woods.

Prices have a habit of spiking in January. This year tariffs might be a reason, but a likelier culprit is more esoteric.

Global markest rose after Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi won a more than two-thirds majority in the country's lower house, handing her a mandate to pursue fiscal expansion and pro-growth policies.

The first trading week of February generated significant losses across financial markets, and on February 9, 2026, the famous ‘Big Short' investor Michael Burry took to X to offer a laconic insight into what is behind the sell-off.

Feb 9 (Reuters) - U.S. equity markets are set for a sharp rebound in IPOs in 2026, Goldman Sachs analysts said, forecasting proceeds quadrupling to a record $160 billion as marquee names such as SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic edge closer to public listings.

Anna Edwards, Guy Johnson, Tom Mackenzie and Mark Cudmore break down today's key themes for analysts and investors on "Bloomberg: The Opening Trade."

U.S. Treasury yields were up to begin the week as investors looked ahead to a flurry of economic data, including the delayed January jobs report.

Big Tech has lost more than $1 trillion in valuation collectively over the past week. Silicon Valley's biggest names have been found in files related to sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein.

The CNN Money Fear and Greed index showed an increase in the overall market sentiment, while the index remained in the “Fear” zone on Friday.

AI bubble risks appear overstated; even a sector contraction is unlikely to threaten the global economy. Major AI players are highly profitable, cash-rich, and insulated from systemic contagion risks seen in past bubbles.

Bitcoin steadies after last week's wild ride