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MercadoLibre Stock (MELI) Watch: Weekend Market Pause, Fresh Bullish Takes, and What to Know Before Monday’s Open
28 December 2025
5 mins read

MercadoLibre Stock (MELI) Watch: Weekend Market Pause, Fresh Bullish Takes, and What to Know Before Monday’s Open

NEW YORK, Dec. 28, 2025, 12:33 a.m. ET — Market closed.

MercadoLibre, Inc. (NASDAQ: MELI) heads into the final week of 2025 with Wall Street on weekend pause, U.S. equities near record territory, and a new wave of weekend reading that leans broadly constructive on the Latin American e-commerce and fintech leader.

With U.S. stock markets closed Saturday and Sunday, MercadoLibre’s next real catalyst is simply the return of liquidity on Monday—especially meaningful in year-end conditions where “thin” trading can exaggerate moves. Reuters described Friday’s post-Christmas session as light-volume and nearly unchanged, while calling out the seasonal “Santa Claus rally” window that investors watch into early January. Reuters+1

Where MercadoLibre stock stands heading into Monday

MELI last finished regular trading at about $2,005.71 at Friday’s close (Dec. 26), up 0.38% on the day, and was essentially flat in late after-hours indications.

Zooming out, the stock is trading within a 52-week range of roughly $1,693 to $2,645, placing it about 24% below its 52-week high and about 18% above its 52-week low (based on Friday’s close).
Investing.com’s historical data also pegged MELI at roughly a +16% change over the past year.

This positioning matters for investor psychology: MELI is not sitting at fresh highs, but it’s also not acting like a broken chart—more like a premium growth name consolidating while markets decide how aggressive (or cautious) to be into 2026.

The bigger market backdrop: year-end “thin tape” rules apply

Friday’s U.S. session was a classic “back from the holiday” drift. Reuters noted the S&P 500, Dow, and Nasdaq ended only marginally lower, with little conviction and lighter-than-usual volume. Reuters AP similarly emphasized extremely light trading conditions, with the major indexes barely moving. AP News

Why it matters for MELI: when broad risk appetite is being set by macro headlines, rates expectations, and year-end rebalancing rather than company-specific news, high-quality growth stocks can swing more than usual—sometimes for reasons that have nothing to do with fundamentals.

On sentiment, Reuters quoted Carson Group chief market strategist Ryan Detrick saying the market was “catching our breath” after a five-day rally and pointing to the Santa Claus rally period as a window that often carries an upward bias. Reuters
In Reuters’ week-ahead framing, Paul Nolte (Murphy & Sylvest Wealth Management) said “momentum is certainly on the side of the bulls,” while Michael Reynolds (Glenmede) highlighted how closely markets are watching the path of rate cuts. Reuters

What’s new on MercadoLibre in the last 24–48 hours

There hasn’t been a blockbuster MercadoLibre earnings release or major wire headline in the past day or two. Instead, the freshest MercadoLibre-focused items have been a mix of investor commentary and positioning updates:

1) A new institutional-filing driven update (MarketBeat)
MarketBeat reported that SWS Partners increased its stake in MercadoLibre in Q3 (per a 13F filing), and also summarized recent insider activity and the broad shape of Wall Street sentiment (consensus “Moderate Buy” in its dataset). MarketBeat

2) Fresh bullish framing from The Motley Fool (syndicated on Nasdaq.com)
In a Dec. 27 piece on Nasdaq.com, written by Rachel Warren for The Motley Fool, MercadoLibre was described as a “digital backbone” in Latin America thanks to its combined marketplace, logistics, and fintech ecosystem—an angle that tends to resonate with long-duration growth investors. Nasdaq

3) Another recent bullish feature from The Motley Fool
A separate Dec. 26 Motley Fool article called MercadoLibre “the ultimate growth stock” for a $2,000 investment amount, noting the stock’s high per-share price and reiterating a long runway narrative. The Motley Fool

4) A new Seeking Alpha “Buy” thesis focused on valuation and competition risk
A Seeking Alpha analysis by Ezequiel Szyrko (published late Dec. 26) reiterated a “Buy” stance, highlighting strong FX-neutral growth but also pointing to intensifying competition (including Asian entrants) as a key risk vector. Seeking Alpha

Taken together, the last 48 hours of MercadoLibre-specific coverage reads less like “breaking news” and more like a temperature check: the long-term bull case remains popular, but investors are increasingly focused on margins, competition, and macro sensitivity.

Why the MercadoLibre bull case still gets airtime

MercadoLibre is often valued like a platform—not a single business line—because it ties together:

  • Commerce (the marketplace)
  • Logistics (Mercado Envíos / delivery network)
  • Fintech (Mercado Pago, credit products, payments off-platform)
  • Advertising (a growing high-margin layer, per bull theses)

In the recent Nasdaq/Motley Fool piece, the author highlighted MercadoLibre’s logistics advantage, including the claim that the company handles the vast majority of deliveries through its own network, and pointed to Mercado Pago’s growing credit footprint as a structural advantage in an underbanked region.

Even if you discount the marketing gloss that often comes with opinion content, the strategic point is real: ecosystem businesses can compound because each layer feeds the others—payments support conversion, logistics supports customer experience, and data supports ad monetization.

Wall Street forecasts: what analysts are pricing in

Across major aggregators, the median view on MELI remains bullish—though datasets differ on the exact number of analysts and precise average target.

  • StockAnalysis.com shows a “Strong Buy” consensus from 18 analysts with an average price target around $2,874 (implying roughly 40%+ upside from Friday’s close). StockAnalysis
  • Investing.com lists an average 12‑month target around $2,815, with a high estimate of $3,500 and a low estimate of $2,190 in its snapshot.
  • MarketBeat’s summary in its institutional-holdings write-up cited an average target in the mid‑$2,800s range as well.

StockAnalysis also itemizes some recent target changes and reiterations from widely followed firms. Among those listed:

  • Scott Devitt (Wedbush): maintained a Buy while reducing target $2,800 → $2,700 (Dec. 19).
  • Kaio Prato (UBS): maintained Strong Buy while adjusting $3,000 → $2,900 (Nov. 24).
  • Andrew Ruben (Morgan Stanley): maintained Buy while raising $2,850 → $2,950 (Nov. 3).

The takeaway isn’t that price targets are destiny (they aren’t), but that the “base case” on the Street still assumes MercadoLibre grows into a materially higher earnings and cash-flow profile than what’s priced today.

Risks investors are watching right now

The near-term debate around MercadoLibre isn’t whether it’s a real business. It’s about what you pay for growth—and what can interrupt it.

Key themes showing up in current analysis include:

  • Competition pressure (including newer cross-border and low-cost entrants).
  • Margin sensitivity to logistics investments and incentives (a lever MercadoLibre uses to defend share).
  • Macro and FX volatility across Latin America, which can distort reported results and investor sentiment even when operational metrics look strong.

In plain English: MercadoLibre can keep winning and still have a choppy stock if investors decide the multiple should compress.

If the market is closed: what to know before the next session

Because it’s the weekend, there are three practical “setup” items investors often monitor before Monday’s open:

1) When risk sentiment “turns back on”
U.S. equity index futures typically reopen Sunday evening. CME Group describes equity index futures trading hours as Sunday–Friday, starting 5:00 p.m. Central (6:00 p.m. ET), with a daily halt. CME Group
If futures gap up or down Sunday night, high-beta growth names can react quickly once premarket liquidity appears.

2) The week-ahead macro calendar in a thin market
Reuters warned that year-end portfolio adjustments can bring volatility when trading volume is light.
Two scheduled items that can matter for rates and broad risk appetite:

  • Pending Home Sales (National Association of Realtors) for November 2025, scheduled for Monday, Dec. 29 at 10:00 a.m. ET, per NAR’s release schedule.
  • FOMC Minutes for the Fed’s Dec. 9–10 meeting, scheduled for Tuesday, Dec. 30 at 2:00 p.m. ET, per the Federal Reserve’s calendar.

You don’t need MercadoLibre-specific headlines for MELI to move; a sharp shift in rate expectations can do the job.

3) Company-specific dates investors are already circling
MercadoLibre’s investor relations site lists Feb. 24, 2026 as a provisional date for Q4’25 results.
Separately, some market calendars and data vendors also list late-February timing for the next earnings window.

Also looming on the corporate calendar: Reuters previously reported that founder Marcos Galperin is set to step down as CEO at the end of 2025, with commerce head Ariel Szarfsztejn slated to take over starting Jan. 1, 2026—a leadership transition that becomes immediate in the coming days.

Bottom line for MercadoLibre stock

As of this weekend, MercadoLibre stock is entering the next session in a familiar posture: a premium compounder story that still has plenty of believers, paired with an investor base that’s increasingly sensitive to competition, margins, and macro noise.

With U.S. markets in a year-end environment—thin liquidity, “Santa rally” narratives, and major attention on Fed signaling—MELI could trade less on company headlines and more as a proxy for global growth appetite. Reuters+1

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