Stock Market Today, Nov. 13, 2025: Dow Slides as Disney Plunges and Tech Stocks Drop After Trump Ends Record Shutdown

S&P 500 Futures Today (November 21, 2025): Tech Rout, Fed Jitters and Black Friday Keep Wall Street on Edge

U.S. stock index futures are pointing to another tense session on Friday, November 21, 2025, as investors digest a brutal tech-led selloff, fading hopes of a December Federal Reserve rate cut, and a critical read on consumer strength heading into Black Friday. S&P 500 futures are hovering slightly in the red, the Nasdaq 100 is under heavier pressure, and Dow futures are modestly higher, reflecting a market searching for direction after a volatile week.  [1]


Key takeaways for S&P 500 futures today

  • S&P 500 futures are modestly lower, trading around the mid‑6,500s early Friday, after the cash index tumbled 1.56% on Thursday to 6,538.76.  [2]
  • Dow futures are slightly positive, while Nasdaq 100 futures are notably weaker, with tech and AI names still under pressure after Nvidia’s wild post‑earnings reversal.  [3]
  • All three major indexes are on track for their worst week since March, as investors scale back expectations for a December rate cut and reassess stretched tech valuations.  [4]
  • Macro drivers today: delayed U.S. data (PMIs and consumer sentiment), a heavy slate of Fed speakers, and the start of the U.S. holiday shopping season with Black Friday in focus.  [5]
  • Underlying story: AI and big‑tech spending, funded increasingly via debt, is starting to worry both equity and credit investors, adding another layer of volatility to S&P 500 futures.  [6]

Where S&P 500 futures stand this morning

Around the early U.S. pre‑market (roughly 5:00–5:30 a.m. ET), futures were giving a cautious signal:

  • Dow Jones futures: up roughly 0.2–0.3%
  • S&P 500 futures: down about 0.1–0.3%
  • Nasdaq 100 futures: lower by around 0.5–0.7%  [7]

Real‑time quotes for the December E‑mini S&P 500 contract (ESZ25) show prices in the mid‑6,500s, with a recent print near 6,557, essentially flat versus the previous futures close around 6,557.50 and within a day’s range roughly between 6,525 and 6,594.  [8]

That leaves futures only slightly above Thursday’s cash close of 6,538.76 for the S&P 500, underscoring how little conviction there is after a sharp intraday reversal yesterday.  [9]

On a weekly basis, the picture is far more dramatic. As of Thursday’s close:

  • The S&P 500 is down about 2.9% week‑to‑date
  • The Dow is off nearly 3%
  • The Nasdaq Composite has dropped around 3.6%  [10]

November, which began at record highs, now finds the S&P 500 more than 4% lower for the month and roughly 5% below its late‑October peak, while the Cboe Volatility Index has climbed to its highest close since April[11]


Why S&P 500 futures are under pressure: AI and tech valuations

The core story behind today’s S&P 500 futures move is the ongoing tech and AI shake‑out.

On Thursday, Wall Street started the day cheering another blowout earnings report from Nvidia. The chipmaker initially surged as much as 5% before reversing sharply to close down about 3.2%, dragging the broader semiconductor index nearly 4.8% lower. The S&P 500 finished down 1.56%, the Nasdaq sank 2.15%, and the Dow lost 0.84%[12]

In Friday’s pre‑market trade, tech remains the weak link:

  • Nvidia is again in the red, adding to Thursday’s reversal.
  • Other chip names like AMD and Broadcom are also lower.
  • Mega‑cap platform stocks including Meta Platforms and Microsoft are trading down in early moves.  [13]

This persistent selling comes against the backdrop of growing nervousness about AI‑driven capital spending. A Reuters analysis highlights that four of the largest cloud and AI platform companies—Alphabet, Meta, Oracle, and Amazon—have together issued nearly $90 billion in public bonds since September to finance data‑center and AI infrastructure, pushing total “hyperscaler” AI‑related debt issuance this year to more than $120 billion[14]

For stock investors, that raises two uncomfortable questions:

  1. Can the bond market absorb this wave of issuance without demanding significantly higher risk premiums?
  2. Will AI ultimately deliver enough cash flow to justify both the rising leverage and today’s high equity valuations?

Strategists quoted in recent research note that some money may need to move “out of stocks into bonds” to fund this capex wave, which directly undermines the justification for sky‑high tech multiples.  [15]

Add in prominent voices like Michael Burry warning that true end‑user demand for AI could be weaker than current market narratives suggest, and it’s clear why tech‑heavy indices—and therefore S&P 500 futures—remain on shaky ground this morning.  [16]


Fed December decision: a “close call” weighing on futures

The other major headwind for S&P 500 futures today is shifting expectations for the Federal Reserve.

A delayed September U.S. jobs report—held up by the recent 43‑day government shutdown—showed nonfarm payrolls rising by 119,000, more than double the 50,000 jobs economists had expected. At the same time, the unemployment rate climbed to 4.4%, a four‑year high[17]

The mixed message has left both Wall Street and the Fed divided:

  • J.P. Morgan and Standard Chartered have dropped their calls for a December rate cut.
  • Citigroup, Deutsche Bank, Wells Fargo and BNP Paribas still project a 25‑basis‑point cut, but explicitly describe it as a “close call.”  [18]
  • Fed funds futures now imply roughly a two‑thirds chance that the Fed holds rates steady at its December 9–10 meeting, with only about a one‑third probability of a cut, down from nearly 50% odds a week ago.  [19]

For equity markets, that repricing matters. Higher‑for‑longer rates compress valuations most aggressively in growth and tech names, the very stocks that drove the S&P 500’s surge earlier this year. The latest Fed minutes also show policymakers split and highly data‑dependent, making each new economic release a potential volatility trigger for S&P 500 futures.  [20]

Yields reflect that tension: the U.S. 10‑year Treasury is trading just above 4.0%, with shorter‑dated yields still elevated, and the dollar index hovering near the 100 level.  [21]


A bruising week sets the stage for today’s trade

This has been a rough week for risk assets:

  • The S&P 500 has fallen close to 3% since Monday and is on pace for its biggest weekly drop since March.
  • The Nasdaq has been hit even harder as AI and mega‑cap tech leadership breaks down.
  • Volatility has jumped, with the VIX around the mid‑20s, its highest readings since April.  [22]

Thursday’s session was particularly ominous: both the Dow and Nasdaq swung more than 1,000 points from their intraday highs to lows, and the spread between the Nasdaq’s intraday peak and trough—almost 5 percentage points—was the largest since the “tariff mayhem” earlier this year.  [23]

Defensive sectors such as consumer staples were the only S&P 500 group to finish in the green on Thursday, while technology led declines, underscoring the shift from growth to safety.  [24]

Against that backdrop, Friday’s modestly negative S&P 500 futures look less like the start of a new leg down and more like a market still trying to find a floor after a violent de‑risking. But with so much macro uncertainty, that floor is far from guaranteed.  [25]


What traders are watching today

1. Fed speakers and rate‑cut messaging

Today’s calendar is packed with Federal Reserve officials, including:

  • Fed Governor Michael Barr (08:30 a.m. ET)
  • Vice Chair Philip Jefferson (08:45 a.m. ET)
  • Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan (09:00 a.m. ET)  [26]

Given the split among major banks and the “close call” framing around December, any hint that policymakers are more worried about the labor market than inflation—or vice versa—could move both Treasury yields and S&P 500 futuresquickly.  [27]

2. Fresh economic data after the shutdown delays

Several key reports arrive today after weeks of data drought caused by the federal shutdown:

  • Flash S&P Global PMIs for U.S. manufacturing and services (09:45 a.m. ET)
  • Final November University of Michigan consumer sentiment (10:00 a.m. ET)  [28]

Soft PMIs or a further deterioration in consumer confidence could reinforce fears that the economy is slowing under the weight of high rates—bearish for cyclical sectors, but potentially supportive of rate‑cut hopes. Stronger‑than‑expected readings might do the opposite: good for growth, but bad for the “Fed pivot” narrative that helped propel stocks earlier this year.  [29]

3. Holiday spending and Black Friday risk

This weekend kicks off the key holiday shopping season, making any early reads on Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales especially important:

  • The S&P 500 is already having a “grim month,” down more than 4% in November, and Black Friday will provide a crucial check on the resilience of the U.S. consumer, who accounts for more than two‑thirds of GDP.  [30]
  • The National Retail Federation expects U.S. holiday sales to exceed $1 trillion for the first time, but the projected 3.7–4.2% growth would be slower than last year’s 4.3%.

Retail earnings this week have been mixed, though Walmart’s upbeat results and raised guidance suggested that at least some big‑box players are coping well with the environment. Futures traders will be alert to any data or corporate commentary that hints consumer spending is either holding up—or cracking.

4. Commodities, crypto and cross‑asset signals

Cross‑asset moves are telling a risk‑off story:

  • Oil: Brent is trading near $62–63 with WTI just under $58, both down roughly 2% on the day and on track for weekly losses above 3%, amid rising hopes of a Russia–Ukraine peace deal that could lift supply.
  • Gold: Spot prices are around $4,040, down about 0.5–0.7%, as higher real yields and a firmer dollar weigh on precious metals.
  • Bitcoin: After touching record highs in October, the token has slumped over 20% this month, with prices sliding into the low‑$80,000s and derivatives markets pricing a greater chance of sub‑$90,000 levels by year‑end.

For equity traders, these moves matter because they influence risk appetite and liquidity. A deeper drop in oil and crypto alongside rising volatility in stocks could further pressure S&P 500 futures as multi‑asset investors de‑risk.


Technical picture: key S&P 500 futures levels to watch

From a technical standpoint, Thursday’s damage was significant:

  • The S&P 500 cash index broke below 6,550, a widely watched support level, and slipped under its 50‑day moving average for the first time in months.
  • The December S&P 500 futures contract (ESZ25) has been oscillating in a 6,525–6,600 band, with previous closes in the mid‑6,500s and a 52‑week range stretching from about 4,832 to nearly 6,954.

Traders are focusing on three zones:

  1. 6,500–6,520: Short‑term support. A sustained break below this area could open the door to a deeper correction toward previous consolidation zones.
  2. 6,550–6,600: The former support band now acting as near‑term resistance. Regaining and holding this range would be the first sign that bulls are regaining control.
  3. 6,700+: A more meaningful recovery area where many momentum strategies would start to flip back to a bullish stance if the market can get there and stay there.

With many systematic and options‑linked strategies tied to these levels, intraday swings in S&P 500 futures could be amplified as prices probe support and resistance throughout the session.


What this means for traders and longer‑term investors

For short‑term traders, today looks like another session where:

  • Headline risk from Fed speeches and macro data can whipsaw S&P 500 futures within minutes.
  • Liquidity may be patchy around key technical levels, exaggerating moves.
  • Cross‑asset flows—from bonds, commodities and crypto—will continue to influence index futures and sector rotations.

For longer‑horizon investors, the message is more nuanced:

  • The S&P 500 is still up around 11% year‑to‑date, despite the recent drop, and remains more than 80% higherthan at the start of the current bull market over three years ago.
  • Elevated volatility and a pullback of about 5% from all‑time highs are well within the historical norm for equity markets, especially in periods of monetary policy uncertainty.
  • Some strategists argue that trimming over‑extended mega‑cap tech and re‑allocating toward financials, industrials and other beneficiaries of AI infrastructure and higher rates could make sense at this stage of the cycle, rather than exiting equities outright.

Still, with AI capex, bond issuance, a divided Fed, and a crucial holiday spending season all converging at once, risk management matters. Position sizing, diversification, and clearly defined time horizons are likely to be more important for returns than calling the next 20‑point move in S&P 500 futures.

Important: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation, or a solicitation to buy or sell any security, index future or other financial instrument. Always do your own research or consult a licensed financial professional before making trading or investment decisions.

References

1. www.reuters.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. www.reuters.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.inkl.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.investing.com, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. www.investing.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. www.reuters.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.investing.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.investing.com, 21. www.investing.com, 22. www.reuters.com, 23. www.reuters.com, 24. www.reuters.com, 25. www.reuters.com, 26. www.inkl.com, 27. www.reuters.com, 28. www.investing.com, 29. www.reuters.com, 30. www.reuters.com

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