U.S. markets brushed aside European moves to pause a trade deal amid tensions over Greenland. President Trump softened his stance at Davos, emphasizing negotiation over force. Investors appeared confident the dispute would not derail economic momentum.
Markets ignored EU drama as Brussels froze a U.S. trade deal over Trump’s Greenland threats. After Trump de-escalated at Davos, stocks rallied—signaling investors see noise, not real risk. #Greenland #EU #WallStreet pic.twitter.com/109CKAhlw2
— Matthew Brady (@mattbrady775) January 21, 2026
- U.S. equity markets traded near intraday highs despite the European Parliament freezing a ratification vote on a U.S.–EU trade deal.
- The freeze followed concerns over President Donald Trump’s recent rhetoric about potentially acquiring Greenland.
- Speaking at Davos, Trump walked back earlier rhetoric, calling for negotiations and stating he does not want to use military force.
- EU trade committee chair Bernd Lange said U.S. threats undermined EU sovereignty and trade stability, forcing suspension of the deal.
- European leaders, including Ursula von der Leyen, warned the EU is prepared to respond if U.S. confrontation continues.
- Despite a spike in trade policy uncertainty, U.S. stocks—especially small caps—recovered losses tied to the Greenland headlines.



