Abstract:Markets rallied after President Trump ruled out military force in the Greenland dispute, but the diplomatic fallout has escalated as the EU Parliament indefinitely suspends key trade votes. The standoff highlights growing transatlantic friction, weighing on the Euro despite the risk-on shift in equities.

Global markets breathed a sigh of relief on Wednesday after US President Donald Trump explicitly ruled out the use of military force to acquire Greenland, sparking a rally in Wall Street indices. However, the geopolitical aftershocks have triggered a tangible diplomatic crisis, with the European Parliament suspending critical trade negotiations in response to what it terms “coercive” tactics.
While the S&P 500 and Nasdaq recovered on the “no force” assurance, the Euro (EUR) faces fresh headwinds. The European Parliament‘s trade committee has halted work on a US-EU trade agreement, citing Trump’s aggressive posture towards Danish sovereignty and his threat to use tariffs as a political weapon.
Bernd Lange, chair of the trade committee, stated unequivocally: “We have no choice but to suspend work on the trade agreement until the US decides to return to a path of cooperation rather than confrontation.”
This sentiment was echoed by the largest political group in parliament, the EPP, which declared that US goods cannot enter the EU tariff-free while such threats persist.
The suspension of trade talks introduces a new layer of structural risk for EUR/USD, countering the short-term relief provided by the de-escalation of military rhetoric.