
Volatility Surge: Repricing of Panic
On Tuesday, the market's sensitivity to "headline risk" noticeably increased, with the Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) rising above the 20 level again, significantly expanding from last weekend's gains, hovering around 20.69. This reflects a shift in risk appetite from the relatively calm phase at the beginning of the year to a more defensive stance.
From a broader market perspective, the VIX briefly reached around 21 during intraday trading, marking an eight-week high.
Catalyst: Tariff Threat Escalation Spills Over to Asset Pricing
On the news front, statements and policy comments related to Greenland, combined with talks of increased tariffs on Europe, prompted the market to reintegrate the "geopolitical tension—trade barriers—downgraded growth expectations" chain into pricing models.
On the European side, the EU is discussing employing tougher tool options while also considering the reinstatement of a tariff list on US goods. Several officials have indicated a preference to first observe whether tariffs are implemented before deciding on countermeasures.
Asset Reaction: Broad Decline in Indices, Weaker Dollar, Stronger Precious Metals
In risk assets, all three major US stock indices saw declines: the Dow fell about 1.76%, the S&P 500 fell about 2.06%, and the Nasdaq fell about 2.39%.
In foreign exchange and interest rates, the US dollar index continued to weaken, while US Treasury yields experienced upward pressure at times, reflecting the tug-of-war between "safe-haven" and "repricing" forces.
In safe-haven assets, gold and silver continued to attract funds and reached new high ranges: spot gold traded above approximately $4,700 per ounce, and silver fluctuated above $90 per ounce at high levels.
Focus: One-Time Sell-off or Longer Volatility Cycle
The current debate is whether this downturn is a "reflexive risk reduction" response to sudden narratives or indicates an upward shift in volatility levels. Some institutional views lean toward the latter, suggesting the market needs to be prepared for repeated "headline-driven" fluctuations, while others believe that there are no signs of systemic withdrawal yet and that short-term deep declines are not the baseline scenario.





