Author: Mamengniu, Shenchao TechFlow
An ice-covered island in the Arctic Circle is shaking the foundations of global financial markets.
On January 20, the U.S. market experienced a brutal "triple sell-off" of stocks, bonds, and the dollar. The Dow plummeted 1.76%, the S&P 500 fell 2.06%—its largest single-day drop since last October—and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 2.39%. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note surged to 4.3%, and the U.S. Dollar Index fell below the 99 mark.
European stock markets crashed simultaneously, with British, French, German, and Italian stock indices all falling over 1%. Even Bitcoin followed, dropping below $90,000.
Meanwhile, the safe-haven asset gold broke through $4,800, hitting a new all-time high.
Black swan events are emerging frequently, and the catalyst sounds unbelievable: Trump's territorial ambitions for Greenland and the confrontation between the U.S. and Europe.
Danish Pension Fund "Dumps U.S. Assets"
Greenland, with an area of 2.16 million square kilometers and a population of only 56,000, is an autonomous territory of Denmark and should have no connection to Wall Street.
But Trump has publicly stated that "Greenland is crucial to U.S. national security" and has hinted on multiple occasions that "the U.S. must possess Greenland." When Denmark and other European countries clearly refused, Trump played his most familiar card: imposing tariffs on all European countries that oppose the U.S. acquisition of Greenland.
The EU's response was swift and firm: considering imposing retaliatory tariffs on $93 billion worth of U.S. goods and restricting U.S. companies' access to the EU market.
The latest development is that Europe is directly targeting the lifeline of dollar hegemony: U.S. Treasury bonds.
Danish pension fund AkademikerPension (serving teachers and scholars), which manages $25 billion in assets, announced: it will sell all its holdings of U.S. Treasury bonds by the end of January, amounting to approximately $100 million.
Chief Investment Officer Anders Schelde's reasoning was blunt: "The U.S. overall has poor credit conditions, and the U.S. government's fiscal situation is unsustainable in the long run."
He specifically mentioned that a key factor driving this decision was Trump's threatening remarks about Greenland. Additionally, concerns about fiscal discipline and the weak dollar prompted the fund to reduce its exposure to U.S. assets.
This is not an isolated case. Two other Danish pension funds, PFA (managing about $120 billion) and Laerernes Pension (teachers' pension fund), have also significantly reduced their holdings of U.S. Treasuries this month.
Do not underestimate these numbers. Although the total size of Danish pension funds is not as large as U.S. behemoths, they represent a complete loss of confidence in U.S. credit by European long-term capital.
The market's reaction was immediate and violent: the euro surged to 1.1768 against the dollar, the Swedish krona and Danish krone soared 1% against the dollar, and U.S. Treasuries were frantically sold off. The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond broke through 4.9%, and the 10-year yield reached 4.3%, both hitting new highs since last September.
Gold Hits Another Record High
Amid this financial storm, only one type of asset is celebrating: precious metals like gold and silver.
Spot gold broke through $4,800 per ounce during trading, once again刷新ing the highest price in human history. Silver also rose above $94, with a cumulative increase of over 30% year-to-date. Global capital is casting a vote of no confidence in dollar credit with real money.
In stark contrast, Bitcoin plummeted to below $89,000, with a single-day drop approaching 3%. Losses for mainstream cryptocurrencies like ETH and Solana were even more severe, generally falling 5-8%.
In the face of a real geopolitical crisis, institutional capital chose the hard currency proven over thousands of years. The "digital gold" narrative of cryptocurrencies briefly failed the systemic risk test.
Look at who is buying gold:
The National Bank of Poland just approved a plan to purchase 150 tons of gold, increasing total reserves from 550 tons to 700 tons, propelling it into the global top ten in gold reserves.
Central Bank Governor Adam Glapinski stated bluntly: "We need more hard assets to fight uncertainty."
Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio issued a sharper warning: Trump's policies are triggering a "capital war," with countries and investors reducing their investment in U.S. assets. He recommended gold as an important hedging tool because the current monetary system is collapsing, and the logic behind central banks holding fiat currency and debt has fundamentally changed.
This sentence is worth pondering repeatedly. Dalio is not a doomsayer; he manages a global macro hedge fund with hundreds of billions of dollars. His every word represents the real anxiety of big capital.
Goldman Sachs also rarely admitted that Trump's tariff threats against Europe are "disruptive" and will continue to suppress the dollar this week.
Chief Foreign Exchange Strategist Kamakshya Trivedi said bluntly: "We have encountered disruptive U.S. policies for two consecutive weekends, which has called into question the halo surrounding U.S. assets."
What does "halo called into question" mean? Simply put, the credit of the U.S. dollar as the global reserve currency is unraveling.
Over the past 70 years, dollar hegemony has been built on three pillars:强大的 military power,维护者 of the free trade system, and predictability of rules.
Trump's Greenland ambitions and tariff blackmail are personally dismantling the latter two pillars.
When the U.S. itself begins to threaten allies, tear up rules, and weaponize geopolitics, why should other countries continue to store their wealth in dollar assets?