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What You Need to Know for January 13, 2026

January 13, 2026 5 min read views
What You Need to Know for January 13, 2026
What You Need to Know for January 13, 2026 William Temple Tue, January 13, 2026 at 9:40 PM GMT+8 5 min read In this article:

Quick Read

  • Gold surged above $420 to record highs as a DOJ probe into Fed Chair Powell sparked fears about central bank independence erosion.

  • JPMorgan beat earnings at $5.23 per share on 40% equity trading growth but took a $2.2B hit from the Apple Card deal.

  • Venezuelan stocks rallied 130% after Maduro’s ouster on January 3.

  • SK Hynix committed $13B to build an advanced chip packaging plant in South Korea.

  • Investors rethink ‘hands off’ investing and decide to start making real money

1. Fed Independence Under Fire

The Justice Department's criminal investigation into Fed Chair Jerome Powell escalated into an unprecedented institutional crisis, drawing condemnation from former Fed chairs Janet Yellen, Ben Bernanke, and Alan Greenspan. Powell called the probe, ostensibly focused on comments about a building renovation project, a "pretext" to win presidential influence over interest rates. Gold surged to record highs above $420 and the dollar weakened as investors hedged against potential erosion of central bank independence. "Gold is no longer moving solely as a hedge against inflation or dollar weakness, but increasingly as protection against geopolitical instability," one analyst noted. Precious metals jumped sharply for the week, with gold mining stocks rallying on safe-haven demand. One Reddit trader captured the sentiment: "We have a geopolitical shitstorm not seen since the Cold War. Unsustainable fiscal and monetary policy in most developed countries."

2. JPMorgan Beats on Trading, Takes Apple Card Hit

JPMorgan (JPM) delivered adjusted earnings of $5.23 per share, beating the $5 estimate, as markets revenue climbed 17% on volatile trading conditions. Equity trading surged 40% driven by prime brokerage strength, while fixed income rose 7%. The bank took a $2.2 billion provision related to its agreement with Goldman Sachs to assume Apple's credit card portfolio. Investment banking fees fell 5%, disappointing analysts expecting stronger dealmaking momentum. CEO Jamie Dimon noted "the U.S. economy has remained resilient" despite softening labor markets. JPM shares dipped 2.42% for the week despite the earnings beat, while other major banks showed mixed performance as the sector digested the Fed independence crisis and its implications for monetary policy.

3. CPI Data Lands Flat, Rate Cut Pause Expected

December CPI data showed prices edging up 0.3% for the month and 2.7% year-over-year, matching November's reading and economist expectations. The report arrives as the Fed prepares for its January 27-28 meeting, where policymakers are widely expected to pause interest rate cuts after the labor market stabilized and inflation remained sticky. Fed officials have conveyed "little urgency" for further rate reductions. The data was complicated by October's government shutdown, which artificially depressed rental cost measures in November. With inflation neither accelerating meaningfully nor cooling rapidly, the Fed faces a delicate balancing act—made more complex by the political pressure campaign targeting Powell.

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4. Trump's Iran Tariff Threat Rattles Trade

President Trump announced 25% tariffs "effective immediately" on any country doing business with Iran, potentially affecting major trading partners including China and India. The move injects fresh uncertainty into US-China trade negotiations and threatens to disrupt corporate supply chains. China remains one of Iran's largest trading partners, making the tariff threat particularly significant for Chinese e-commerce giants. Despite the overhang, Alibaba (BABA) rallied 6.43% for the week to $166.31, up 102% over the past year, while other Chinese tech stocks showed resilience. The strength suggests investors view the tariff rhetoric as negotiating posture rather than immediate policy.

5. Venezuela's Post-Maduro Market Explosion

Venezuelan stocks surged 130% to record highs following the ouster of President Nicolás Maduro on January 3, with the benchmark Indice Bursatil de Capitalizacion rallying on optimism about normalized international relations and reopened oil markets. The dramatic reversal could reshape global energy supply dynamics, particularly for US oil majors positioned to participate in Venezuela's rehabilitation. Exxon Mobil (XOM) edged down 1.06% for the week to $124.03, while other major energy producers showed muted reactions as investors await concrete policy changes. One Reddit post titled "Trump hands Oil rebuild to US Giants" drew 1,276 upvotes and 423 comments, signaling retail enthusiasm for the sector's long-term prospects despite near-term uncertainty.

6. Semiconductor Split: Memory Surges, AI Chips Pause

SK Hynix announced a $13 billion investment to build an advanced chip packaging plant in South Korea, underscoring structural demand for AI memory chips amid persistent supply constraints. The news helped propel memory chip stocks to strong weekly gains, with the sector benefiting from HBM (high bandwidth memory) shortages. Meanwhile, Nvidia (NVDA) traded flat to slightly down at $184.94, off 0.84% year-to-date despite maintaining 32% gains over 12 months. The divergence reflects investor rotation toward memory chip makers after AI accelerator stocks consolidated following massive 2024-2025 rallies. "TSMC fourth-quarter revenue jumps 20% to $33.1B, beats forecasts on AI chip demand," noted one widely-discussed Reddit post, confirming the sector's underlying strength.

7. Retail's Precious Metals Euphoria

Precious metals rallied sharply, with one trader posting: "5 days ago I decided to stop pretending I understood tech earnings and instead YOLO into silver. Not AI. Not EVs. Not some pre-revenue penny stock with vibes. Just shiny rock." The post detailed precious metals ETF and mining stock call options "printing" as the trade became retail's consensus macro play. Another analysis noted silver has returned 1,321% over 30 years versus the S&P 500's 1,051% price-only return. Gold (GLD) climbed 8.53% for the month to $422.23, while sophisticated options traders noted elevated implied volatility and rich put premiums in precious metals options. The surge reflects not just inflation hedging but growing concerns about institutional stability and geopolitical fragmentation.

It’s Time To Rethink Passive Investing

For more than a decade, the investing advice aimed at everyday Americans followed a familiar script: automate everything, keep costs low, and don’t touch a thing. And increasingly, investors are realizing that being completely hands-off also means being completely disengaged.

That realization hits like a lightning bolt when you realize not just how much better your returns could be, but that there are amazing offers like one app where new self-directed investing accounts funded with as little as $50 can receive stock worth up to $1,000.

Take back your investing and start earning real returns, your way.

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