Davos 2026: What Was Decided — and How It May Hit Markets and Business
Davos 2026: What Was Decided — and How It May Hit Markets and Business

Davos 2026: What Was Decided — and How It May Hit Markets and Business

Alice Cooper · January 27, 2026 · 4m

The World Economic Forum isn’t just a place where formal deals get signed. It’s where signals form — the kind that make banks tighten risk appetite, companies rethink supply chains, and investors adjust plans.

This article pulls together the discussions that have practical follow-through.

Tariffs, Trade Risk, and “Politics in the Price”

One of the most talked-about threads was trade anxiety: markets reacting to the probability of new tariffs and how quickly that can translate into real rules for imports and exports. Donald Trump’s sharp comments on tariffs and trade terms were also highlighted as something markets are forced to price into scenarios.

What this Changes for Businesses in 2026:

  • contracts are more likely to include clauses for changes in duties/sanctions/routes;
  • procurement will diversify: a second supplier, a second route, sometimes a second payment rail;
  • banks and insurers will expand due-diligence questionnaires around origin, counterparties and jurisdictions.

The Most “Ground-Level” Deal: EU–India and the FTA Restart

On the sidelines of the forum, the EU and India agreed to relaunch negotiations on a free trade agreement (FTA), with a specific emphasis on investment and the geopolitical resilience of supply chains.

Where you may feel it:

  • pharma, chemicals, auto components, industrials, IT services, logistics;
  • companies sitting on “Europe ↔ Asia” chains will start recalculating options early: where to produce, where to store, how to insure risk.

New Deals

In WEF’s official takeaways, the “new deals” block is about programs and coalitions being launched.

UK: around $2B in private investment

WEF’s takeaways highlighted a UK government announcement about attracting roughly $2B in private investment (the project mix and focus areas are detailed through public materials).

Water and infrastructure: the Get Blue initiative

Water.org launched Get Blue with corporate partners (the official material mentions Gap Inc., Amazon, Starbucks, and Ecolab), aiming to expand access to water and sanitation through financing tools and partnerships.

This matters beyond NGOs: initiatives like these often turn into budgets, tenders, and supply-chain projects over a 12–36 month horizon — especially across construction, infrastructure, logistics, and insurance.

Geopolitics Has Landed in Finance and Compliance

WEF’s wrap-ups directly connect geopolitics to how business runs payments and risk frameworks: fragmentation, tighter checks, data demands, sanctions risk.

What that looks like in practice:

  • more SoF/SoW (source of funds / source of wealth) requests from banks and payment providers;
  • more chain checks (who the counterparty is, where the money came from, why these amounts/frequency);
  • higher compliance costs and longer deal cycles in sensitive jurisdictions.

What about AI?

AI in 2026 was framed less as hype and more as investment, productivity, and competitiveness. The Chief Economists’ Outlook was referenced: expectations for the US improved, and AI capex was cited as one factor supporting growth and infrastructure investment.

Practical implications:

  • bigger budgets for compute, data, and cybersecurity (AI doesn’t scale without them);
  • more attention to compliance and safety measures, because banks and large customers increasingly require them upfront.

Climate and Adaptation

The climate agenda in 2026 shifted from promises toward coalitions and measurable programs.
The First Movers Coalition continues to expand demand for low-carbon tech via large-company procurement (the logic: markets form where demand is pre-committed).

The Forest Future Alliance talked about scaling finance and projects tied to forests and supply chains (called out as a separate line in official messaging).

The emphasis on resilience and adaptation also shows up through water initiatives like Get Blue — because water is one of the most direct economic risks for cities, industry, and agriculture.

Where business tends to feel this first: 

  • agri supply chains, FMCG, textiles (water/land/raw-material traceability);
  • real estate and infrastructure (flood/heat risk and insurance costs);
  • lending (banks increasingly ask for plans around physical risk to assets).

Skills and Labour

WEF’s official wrap-ups highlighted skills and jobs initiatives (SmartStart, India Skills Accelerator, youth programs tied to manufacturing and supply chains). Talent shortages and reskilling remain high on the agenda, and funding tends to follow. Where training pipelines expand, hiring speed and wage expectations often shift within 1–2 years.

A Practical Checklist of Follow-Through

If you’re a founder, CFO, or operations lead, here’s what Davos 2026 suggests doing next:

  1. Trade/logistics: rerun tariff scenarios and build route alternatives.
  2. Compliance: prepare a clean money narrative + documents — banks will ask more often.
  3. AI programs: budget for infrastructure (data, security, compliance), not just demos.
  4. Climate risk: add physical risk (water/heat/insurance) into models for assets and supply chains
  5. Sector windows: track “new deals” and coalitions — that’s where budgets and tenders tend to appear.

Conclusion

Tariffs and geopolitics are turning into bank rules, while AI and infrastructure are becoming baseline budget items rather than optional experiments. In that kind of environment, many investors keep a portion of capital in more stable income tools that don’t require daily decisions and help ride out uncertainty.

Within the Hexn ecosystem, that role can be covered via deposits: fixed income up to 20% APY with regular payouts — a practical operating buffer while markets stay choppy.

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Davos 2026 recap: key decisions and market impact | Hexn