NEW YORK (Dec. 22, 2025) — U.S. stock futures were modestly higher early Monday as Wall Street heads into a holiday-shortened week with two forces pulling attention in opposite directions: renewed momentum in mega-cap AI names, and a powerful risk-off signal from commodities as gold and silver pushed to fresh records. [1]
After last week’s uneven finish, investors are looking for a late-year “Santa Claus rally” to reassert itself—while keeping one eye on thin holiday liquidity and another on a busy slate of delayed U.S. economic data due Tuesday, including third-quarter GDP and durable goods orders. [2]
Stock futures rise ahead of the opening bell
Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq-100 all pointed higher in premarket trading, signaling cautious optimism as traders position for the final stretch of 2025. The move comes as markets brace for lighter volumes that can amplify day-to-day swings—especially when a macro headline (or one overcaffeinated algorithm) hits the tape. [3]
Global markets offered a supportive backdrop: Asian equities broadly advanced and U.S. futures climbed after a late-week rebound in AI-linked stocks helped lift sentiment into Monday. [4]
Friday’s rebound: Tech and AI leadership returns
The tone improved late last week, with Friday’s session delivering a clear message: when AI megacaps catch a bid, index-level gravity gets weirdly cooperative.
On Friday, the Dow rose 183.04 points (0.38%) to 48,134.89, the S&P 500 gained 59.74 points (0.88%) to 6,834.50, and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 301.26 points (1.31%) to 23,307.62. [5]
For the week, the S&P 500 was up about 0.11%, the Nasdaq gained about 0.48%, and the Dow slipped about 0.67%—a mixed scoreboard that still leaves equities on track for a strong year. [6]
What drove the move?
A rebound in technology shares did much of the heavy lifting, helped by renewed confidence in parts of the AI complex after upbeat signals from the semiconductor supply chain. Micron continued its rally, Nvidia jumped, and Oracle surged on a deal-related catalyst tied to TikTok’s U.S. operations. [7]
At the same time, not every corner of the market joined the party: Nike slid sharply following margin pressure, underscoring that consumer-facing names remain more fragile than the headline indexes might suggest. [8]
Gold and silver steal the spotlight with fresh records
While equities try to finish the year with some festive cheer, commodities are screaming something closer to: “Uncertainty lives here.”
On Monday, gold jumped past $4,400 per ounce for the first time, touching an intraday record around $4,420 before easing slightly. Silver hit a new all-time high around $69.44/oz. Reuters reported that gold is up roughly 67% year-to-date, while silver is up about 138%—a staggering divergence that reflects both investment demand and supply constraints in silver. [9]
For U.S. stocks, the precious-metals surge matters for three reasons:
- Rate expectations: Gold tends to benefit when markets believe interest rates will fall (or at least not rise), because non-yielding assets look better when cash yields are expected to decline. [10]
- Risk appetite: Record safe-haven demand can be a sign that investors want insurance, even while buying stocks. [11]
- Sector impact: Strength in gold and silver can support miners and metals-linked names, while also feeding inflation and currency debates that ripple through broader asset pricing. [12]
Oil ticks higher on Venezuela enforcement and geopolitics
Energy markets also entered the week with a geopolitical pulse.
Oil prices rose after U.S. officials said the U.S. intercepted (or pursued) an oil tanker in international waters off Venezuela, adding fresh uncertainty around supply flows tied to sanctioned crude. Brent traded around $61.04 and WTI around $57.07 in early Monday trading, according to Reuters. [13]
This matters for equities because energy price spikes can quickly become a “tax” on consumer spending and corporate margins—yet at current levels, oil remains far below the panic zones that historically choke off growth. The more immediate implication is sector rotation: even small moves in crude can jolt energy stocks, especially in thin holiday trading. [14]
The calendar: quiet Monday, high-impact Tuesday
One reason markets often drift on the Monday before Christmas is simple: there’s frequently not much fresh macro data to fight over.
MarketWatch’s U.S. economic calendar shows no major reports scheduled for Monday, Dec. 22, setting up Tuesday as the main event. [15]
Key U.S. releases to watch this week
Tuesday, Dec. 23 is expected to feature several closely watched data points, including:
- A delayed report on third-quarter GDP
- Durable goods orders
- Consumer confidence [16]
The “delayed” part is not trivia: Reuters notes investors have been navigating economic releases affected by a lengthy federal government shutdown, raising questions about data timing and potential distortions—exactly the sort of thing that can make markets overreact to numbers that later get revised. [17]
Holiday schedule: early close ahead, then Christmas shutdown
U.S. markets are heading into a compressed trading week:
- Early close on Wednesday, Dec. 24 (Christmas Eve)
- Closed Thursday, Dec. 25 (Christmas Day) [18]
Exchange operators have also clarified that—even after a presidential directive closing federal government offices on Dec. 24 and Dec. 26—major U.S. exchanges plan to keep to their normal market schedule, including an early close on the 24th and a regular session on the 26th. [19]
For traders and long-term investors alike, the practical takeaway is classic: low liquidity can exaggerate price moves, particularly in index-heavy names and high-beta tech.
The year-end narrative: Santa rally hopes vs. AI skepticism
The late-December “Santa Claus rally” isn’t just a meme—it’s a well-known seasonal window watched by systematic funds and discretionary managers alike.
Reuters cites Stock Trader’s Almanac data showing that since 1950, the S&P 500 has risen an average 1.3% during the Santa rally period (the last five trading days of the year plus the first two of January). For 2025, Reuters notes that window starts Wednesday and runs through Jan. 5. [20]
But 2025’s year-end setup has a twist: much of the market’s recent volatility has been driven by scrutiny of massive corporate AI spending and uncertainty about how quickly that investment turns into durable profits. Reuters describes this as one of the two dominant forces moving stocks into year-end (alongside shifting expectations for Fed cuts in 2026). [21]
That tension shows up in the tape as a kind of split personality:
- AI leaders can still pull the indexes higher fast.
- But when doubts flare up—about valuations, funding, or data-center demand—the same concentration risk can drag the market lower just as quickly. [22]
A structural market story still unfolding: Nasdaq’s push toward 23-hour trading
One of the most consequential “market plumbing” stories heading into 2026 is the fight over time itself.
Reuters reported that Nasdaq plans to file paperwork with the SEC for 23-hour weekday trading, reflecting surging global demand for U.S. equities and a broader industry push toward near round-the-clock access. [23]
This doesn’t change today’s opening bell—but it does highlight a deeper trend that supports U.S. equity dominance: international participation, extended access, and the continued globalization of “Wall Street hours.”
What investors are watching right now
Heading into Monday’s session, the market’s focus is likely to cluster around:
- Mega-cap tech and semiconductors: Nvidia, Micron, and other AI-linked names remain central to index direction. [24]
- Rates and Fed expectations: Gold’s surge reflects aggressive positioning around future cuts; equities may interpret the same signal as supportive—until it starts implying recession risk. [25]
- Commodities as a risk barometer: Oil’s geopolitical bump and metals’ record run are flashing “macro uncertainty,” even if stocks are trying to party through it. [26]
- Tuesday’s data dump: GDP, durable goods, and consumer confidence could reshape the soft-landing narrative—especially given the backdrop of shutdown-delayed reporting. [27]
The bottom line for the U.S. stock market on 22.12.2025
U.S. stock futures are leaning higher to start Monday, with markets hoping that last week’s AI-led rebound can carry into a holiday “Santa rally” stretch. At the same time, record-breaking moves in gold and silver—and a geopolitically supported bid in oil—signal that investors are still buying protection as they chase returns.
In a week where liquidity will thin out fast and the calendar concentrates market-moving data into Tuesday, the most important theme may be simple: prices can move more than “the fundamentals” justify when fewer participants are around to disagree.
References
1. www.marketwatch.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. www.marketwatch.com, 4. apnews.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.reuters.com, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. www.reuters.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.marketwatch.com, 16. www.investopedia.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.nasdaqtrader.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.reuters.com, 23. www.reuters.com, 24. www.reuters.com, 25. www.reuters.com, 26. www.reuters.com, 27. www.investopedia.com


