President Donald Trump’s arrival in Davos this week lands at a moment of unusual strain in the global trading system. It comes with explicit threats, defined numbers, and an unresolved geopolitical dispute that now sits squarely at the centre of transatlantic relations.
The World Economic Forum is traditionally a venue for reassurance. Leaders gather to reinforce confidence, signal stability, and emphasise cooperation. This year, the mood is different.
Trade pressure, security concerns, and territorial ambition are converging in a way that makes calm messaging difficult to sustain.
At the heart of the tension sits Greenland. What was once discussed as a strategic curiosity has become an active bargaining chip. Tariffs are no longer framed around competitiveness or market access. They are being tied directly to geopolitical outcomes.
The European Union is already preparing its response. Discussions around retaliatory tariffs on as much as €93 billion of US goods underline how advanced this confrontation has become. These figures reflect planning, modelling, and a belief that escalation is a credible risk rather than a negotiating bluff.
Once countermeasures reach this stage, disengagement becomes harder. Political capital has been committed. Domestic audiences have been primed. The cost of reversing course increases with every preparatory step taken on both sides of the Atlantic.
Financial markets have responded accordingly. Investors have not waited for policy confirmation. They have reacted to probability. has surged to fresh record highs. has followed sharply. European equities have opened lower, while US futures have declined despite domestic markets being closed.
These moves reflect anticipation. Markets price the direction of travel, not the final destination. When trade relationships between long-standing allies appear conditional, risk premiums rise across asset classes.
The deeper concern lies beyond short-term price action. Trade threats of this nature alter behaviour well before tariffs are enacted. Corporations delay investment. Supply chain decisions are revisited. Currency hedging increases. Boardrooms factor political leverage into operational planning.
Three broad outcomes now present themselves. A negotiated pause remains possible, though uncertainty would linger because the precedent has already been set. Partial tariff implementation would almost certainly provoke retaliation and entrench mistrust. A full move to higher tariffs would accelerate supply chain fragmentation and force a reassessment of cross-border exposure across multiple industries.
None of these outcomes is confined to Europe and the US. Transatlantic trade anchors global confidence. When that anchor shifts, the effects ripple outward through emerging markets, capital flows, and diplomatic alignments.
There is also a wider precedent at stake. If trade policy becomes an accepted instrument for advancing territorial or strategic objectives, other regions will draw conclusions. Economic relationships would then operate under a different set of assumptions, where leverage replaces predictability.
Davos matters this year because credibility is on the line. Statements will not be assessed in isolation. They will be weighed against prior threats and subsequent actions. Tone will matter far less than follow-through.
Attendance alone does nothing to reset expectations. Consistency between language and policy determines trust. Global leaders understand this, and so do markets.
The Greenland dispute has therefore become a test case. It asks whether economic influence will be exercised with restraint or deployed as a blunt tool in a more contested global environment.
Trump arrives in Davos with the capacity to soften or harden global political risk in a matter of days. The choices made around trade, tariffs, and territorial ambition will shape how governments, businesses, and investors assess that risk well beyond this summit.
