In Paris, the CAC 40, which had already shown resilience the previous day (+0.08%), surged by 1.05% to 8,154 points, while Frankfurt's DAX 40 followed suit with a gain of 1.41% to 24,907 points. Finally, the Euro Stoxx 50 index climbed 1.42% to 5,966 points.

In Davos, after a highly anticipated speech (praising the United States), Donald Trump withdrew his threats to raise tariffs on imports into the United States from countries supporting Greenland, including France.

The American president also dropped the idea of using force to take control of Greenland and mentioned an agreement with NATO regarding the Arctic island.

These announcements allowed bond yields to ease, particularly in the United States. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury fell from a peak of 4.3105% on January 20 to 4.2389%.

On the currency market, the euro rose slightly against the greenback (+0.07%), trading at 1.1693 dollars.

As for commodities, oil prices are falling, with a barrel costing 64.45 dollars in London (-1.33%), while in New York it stands at 59.88 dollars (-1.22%).

On the macroeconomic front, the agenda is empty in Europe, but will be busier this afternoon in the United States. Investors will be closely watching the final data for U.S. third-quarter GDP, where Donald Trump has already announced that it will rise by 5.4% in the fourth quarter. Also in the U.S., household spending and income figures are due—always important data reflecting domestic consumption—along with new weekly jobless claims and the personal consumption expenditures price index, a key inflation component.

The microeconomic calendar is also packed, with quarterly results from Procter & Gamble, GE Aerospace, Abbott Laboratories, Intel...
In Europe, corporate news is particularly busy.

Ubisoft plunged 33.78% after launching a sweeping reorganization plan, which led the group to revise its financial targets downward. Analysts at Oddo BHF described it as a "mega profit warning."

In contrast, Interparfums stood out with a gain of 4.84% after reporting a 4.3% rise in annual organic revenue to 918 million euros, thanks to a slightly better-than-expected year-end.

Within the CAC 40, Michelin and Orange also ranked among the top performers, with respective increases of 2.51% and 3.30%. Michelin unveiled preliminary figures for the 2025 fiscal year, including free cash flow above expectations. Orange confirmed that, along with Bouygues Telecom and Iliad (parent company of Free), discussions were underway to acquire a large part of Altice's telecommunications activities.

Also in the telecom sector, Norway's Telenor soared 8.06% after reaching an agreement with Arise Digital to sell it 24.95% of shares in Thailand's True.

Meanwhile, Volkswagen jumped 4.42%. The German automaker indicated it would exceed its annual cash generation target for the 2025 fiscal year.

In Spain, Bankinter stumbled by 2.33%. Despite the bank posting a strong increase in quarterly profits, its shares fell victim to profit-taking after an 85% surge last year.