NEW YORK, January 2, 2026, 06:59 ET — Premarket
- Dow E-minis were up 171 points, or 0.35%, in early trading ahead of the first U.S. session of 2026. Reuters
- The Dow ended 2025 at 48,063.29 after a 0.63% drop in the final session, but it rose 12.97% for the year. Reuters
- Investors are watching next week’s jobs report and inflation data, plus early earnings and policy headlines, for clues on rates and risk appetite. Reuters
Dow Jones Industrial Average futures pointed higher on Friday, signaling a steadier start to 2026 after Wall Street slid in the final sessions of last year. At 5:45 a.m. ET, Dow E-minis were up 171 points, or 0.35%, while S&P 500 E-minis gained 41.5 points (0.60%) and Nasdaq 100 E-minis added 267 points (1.05%). Analysts at Deutsche Bank cautioned the first trading day has been a poor guide to how the year ultimately plays out. Reuters
The early move matters because investors are testing whether the rally that powered major U.S. indexes to records in 2025 can reassert itself after a late-December wobble. Fresh positioning at the start of January can also magnify day-to-day swings, especially when liquidity is still rebuilding after the holidays.
Next week brings a dense run of catalysts that can reset expectations for rates and growth. The Federal Reserve ended 2025 with its benchmark rate at 3.5%-3.75%, and derivatives markets showed little chance of a cut at the late-January meeting but nearly a 50% chance of a quarter-point reduction in March. “Anything that has to do with underlying economic activity and inflation is really going to catch the market’s attention,” said Scott Wren, senior global market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute. Reuters
The Dow’s cash index last closed at 48,063.29, down 303.77 points, or 0.63%, in the final session of 2025, while still logging a 12.97% annual gain. The S&P 500 finished 2025 up 16.39% and the Nasdaq ended up 20.36%, after both fell more than 0.7% in the year’s final session. Reuters
In premarket trade, the Dow is being guided by index futures — contracts tied to where traders expect the benchmark to open — before the underlying shares set a new cash price at the opening bell. The Dow itself is price-weighted, meaning higher-priced stocks carry more influence than lower-priced ones, regardless of company size.
Investors are also watching for whether the market can regain seasonal momentum after missing a so-called “Santa Claus rally,” a term used for strength over the last five trading days of December and the first two of January. Traders often treat that window as a sentiment check, not a signal, because the calendar can distort flows.
Rate expectations remain the fulcrum. Even small changes in the perceived path for Fed cuts can ripple into equity valuations, particularly for sectors that are sensitive to financing costs and consumer demand.
The next read on the labor market is likely to do the heavy lifting. Investors are weighing whether softer hiring supports a gentler Fed stance — or whether a weak report hints at deeper economic strain.
Earnings season will add another layer. Early bank results and guidance can shape expectations for credit quality, loan growth and deal activity, all of which influence broader risk appetite.
Policy risk is also in the frame. A Supreme Court decision on President Donald Trump’s tariffs and his expected choice of a new Fed chair are among the headlines investors are tracking for potential market impact, alongside a normalizing flow of economic releases after a prolonged U.S. government shutdown disrupted the data calendar. Reuters
Overseas, a firmer tone in global equities is setting a supportive backdrop for U.S. risk assets at the open, with European benchmarks starting 2026 at fresh highs as investors brace for a year expected to test the durability of the AI-led rally and U.S. policy uncertainty. Reuters