U.S. Stock Market Today, December 11, 2025: Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Slip as Oracle Revives AI Bubble Fears After Fed Rate Cut

U.S. Stock Market Today, December 11, 2025: Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Slip as Oracle Revives AI Bubble Fears After Fed Rate Cut

U.S. stock market snapshot on December 11, 2025

Wall Street is waking up to a very different mood this morning than it had last night.

After a powerful rally on Wednesday that pushed the S&P 500 to the brink of a fresh record following the Federal Reserve’s third interest‑rate cut of 2025, U.S. stock index futures turned lower early Thursday as investors digested a shaky earnings update from Oracle and renewed worries about a potential AI spending bubble.

As of around 5:50 a.m. ET on Thursday, Dow Jones Industrial Average futures were down about 0.2%, S&P 500 futures were off roughly 0.6%, and Nasdaq 100 futures were down about 0.8%, according to data cited by Reuters. [1] Tech and AI‑linked names led the retreat, offsetting lingering optimism about easier monetary policy.


Wednesday’s Fed-fueled rally set up today’s pullback

Before Thursday’s wobble, U.S. stocks had just staged an impressive move higher.

On Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 497.46 points, or 1.05%, to close at 48,057.75. The S&P 500 gained 46.17 points, or 0.67%, to finish at 6,886.68—less than five points shy of a new all‑time closing high—while the Nasdaq Composite rose 77.67 points, or 0.33%, to 23,654.16. [2]

That rally came immediately after the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) delivered:

  • A third consecutive 25‑basis‑point rate cut this year,
  • Bringing the federal funds target range down to 3.50%–3.75%, its lowest level in nearly three years, [3]
  • Alongside projections that only one additional cut is likely in 2026, implying a pause ahead rather than a long cutting cycle. [4]

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said policymakers are “well positioned to wait to see how the economy evolves,” characterizing the policy rate as close to a level that neither stimulates nor restrains growth. [5]

The message was more dovish than some investors had feared. Treasury yields slipped and the dollar weakened, helping support risk assets and pushing the S&P 500 to the edge of new record territory. [6]

Sector performance on Wednesday

Nine of the S&P 500’s eleven sectors finished higher, led by industrials and materials, which gained roughly 1.8% and 1.8% respectively, while utilities and consumer staples lagged. [7]

Earnings‑driven movers included:

  • GE Vernova, which surged after raising its long‑term revenue outlook and boosting its dividend and buyback program. [8]
  • Palantir, which climbed as investors cheered new AI‑related contract wins. [9]
  • Cracker Barrel and GameStop, which moved in opposite directions on mixed earnings and revenue trends. [10]

All of that created a feel‑good setup heading into Thursday—until Oracle showed up.


Thursday morning: Oracle and AI bubble fears weigh on futures

The main story in U.S. stock market trading today is Oracle’s earnings and what they suggest about the broader AI boom.

Oracle’s forecast hits AI sentiment

Oracle shares tumbled more than 11% in premarket trading after the software and cloud company reported guidance that missed analyst expectations and revealed that annual capital expenditures would be $15 billion higher than previously planned. [11]

According to Reuters and other market reports:

  • Investors are increasingly uneasy with how aggressively some companies are spending on AI infrastructure,
  • Oracle’s incremental spending plans are seen as heavily debt‑financed, raising questions about balance‑sheet risk, [12]
  • And the disappointment fed fears that the AI build‑out might be running ahead of sustainable profits, echoing comparisons to the dot‑com bubble. [13]

A Reuters “Morning Bid” column captured the mood with the line that Oracle could be the “Grinch” spoiling the Fed’s early holiday gift, as the previously smooth narrative of “lower rates plus strong AI growth” runs into skepticism over return on investment. [14]

Broader tech and crypto reaction

Oracle’s stumble rippled across high‑growth and AI‑linked names:

  • Nvidia and Broadcom futures were down around 1.7% premarket,
  • Mega‑cap cloud “hyperscalers” such as Microsoft and Amazon were indicated roughly 0.7% lower,
  • AI infrastructure player CoreWeave was down about 3%. [15]

AI‑related jitters also spilled into digital assets. Crypto stocks such as MicroStrategy and Bit Digital declined as Bitcoin briefly slipped below $90,000, according to futures commentary and crypto‑focused coverage. [16]

At the index level, the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) ticked higher to just above 16, signalling a modest uptick in risk aversion but nothing resembling panic. [17]


The Fed’s third 2025 rate cut: supportive, but not a green light

While Oracle dominates today’s headlines, the backdrop is still the Fed’s policy shift and what it means for the U.S. stock market outlook.

What the Fed actually did

Key points from the Fed’s December meeting:

  • Cut the federal funds rate by 0.25 percentage points for the third straight meeting, to about 3.6%, the lowest since early 2023. [18]
  • Signaled only one additional cut in 2026, matching projections from September and indicating no rush toward deeply lower rates. [19]
  • Emphasised that the job market shows “significant downside risks” and that policymakers do not view rate hikes as their base case going forward. [20]

The decision came with three dissents, the most in six years: two officials wanted no cut, while one pushed for a larger 50‑basis‑point move. [21] That split underscores how finely balanced the Fed’s dual mandate has become, with inflation still above 2% while unemployment edges higher.

Markets’ reaction to the Fed

Immediately after the announcement:

  • The S&P 500 climbed roughly 0.7% and approached its October record high. [22]
  • Treasury yields slipped—10‑year yields pulled back to around 4.15%—as investors priced in at least two more cuts in 2026, more than the Fed’s own median projection. [23]
  • The U.S. dollar weakened against major peers, aiding risk assets and commodities. [24]

Analysts generally framed the decision as “about as good as markets could have hoped for”: a Fed that is still easing, but not so aggressively that it signals panic about the economy. [25]


AI bubble worries vs. earnings reality

A second key theme in stock market analysis today is the tension between:

  • A supportive Fed, and
  • Mounting concern that AI‑related capital spending and valuations may be running too hot.

Bloomberg’s markets newsletter notes that while the policy backdrop is friendly, equity investors “can’t shake AI bubble fears,” with Oracle’s results providing a high‑profile test of whether enormous AI infrastructure bets are translating into cash flows. [26]

Reuters’ Morning Bid column makes a similar point, highlighting that:

  • The Fed is now buying $40 billion per month in Treasury bills for reserve management, adding to a generally liquidity‑friendly environment,
  • Yet the dominant driver of Thursday’s price action is not macro, but corporate: disappointment with one of the bellwethers of the AI build‑out. [27]

That split narrative helps explain why high‑growth tech and crypto‑adjacent names are under the most pressure in premarket trading, even as cyclicals and value‑oriented stocks look more resilient.


Sector and stock stories to watch today

Tech and AI infrastructure

  • Oracle (ORCL) is at the center of the storm after its forecast miss and higher‑than‑expected capex plans. [28]
  • Nvidia (NVDA) and Broadcom (AVGO), two of the key semiconductor names powering AI data centers, are trading lower premarket, though analysts still expect strong numbers from Broadcom’s earnings later today. [29]

Fed-sensitive cyclical names

On Wednesday, economically sensitive stocks—from industrials to materials—outperformed the broad market after the Fed emphasised downside risks to employment while still seeing scope for decent GDP growth next year. [30]

If Thursday’s weakness remains tech‑focused, some strategists expect value and cyclical sectors to hold up better into year‑end, especially if incoming data confirm a soft‑landing rather than a sharp slowdown. [31]

Crypto and risk sentiment

Crypto‑related equities are trading weaker as Bitcoin pulls back below the psychologically important $90,000 mark and sentiment across speculative assets cools. [32]

For now, that looks more like a positioning shake‑out than a systemic risk event, but it’s an important barometer of investors’ appetite for high‑beta trades.


2026 outlook: cautious optimism from strategists

Beyond the day‑to‑day moves, several big‑picture outlook pieces published today are helping shape how investors think about the U.S. stock market in 2026.

A widely read outlook from Charles Schwab’s chief investment strategist Liz Ann Sonders, reprinted on RealClearMarkets, argues that: [33]

  • The macro environment is likely to remain unstable, with policy cross‑currents, a wobbly labor market and lingering inflation pressures.
  • However, improving earnings growth could still allow U.S. stocks to “churn higher” over the next year, albeit with more volatility and less multiple expansion than in the earlier stages of this cycle.

Strategists quoted in Reuters and AP coverage echo a similar storyline:

  • Growth expectations for 2026 GDP have been nudged up by Fed officials to around 2.3%, suggesting steady but unspectacular expansion. [34]
  • The Fed projects unemployment around 4.4% next year—higher than today, but still historically low—highlighting the risk that policy mistakes could tip a fragile labor market. [35]
  • Markets are pricing more easing than the Fed is currently signaling, raising the risk that any disappointment could trigger bouts of volatility. [36]

Overlaying all of this is the political backdrop, including expectations of a change in Fed leadership under President Donald Trump in 2026, which could tilt policy in a more aggressively dovish direction and add another layer of uncertainty. [37]


Key risks and catalysts for the rest of 2025

Looking beyond today’s open, traders and investors are watching several near‑term catalysts that could drive the U.S. stock market into year‑end:

  1. Economic data
    • Weekly jobless claims and trade balance data due later today will offer fresh clues on the health of the labor market and external demand. [38]
    • Upcoming inflation prints will help determine whether the Fed can stick with its pause or is pushed into further cuts sooner than its current projections suggest. [39]
  2. Earnings from AI bellwethers
    • Broadcom, Costco, and Lululemon are among the high‑profile companies reporting in the coming days. Their commentary on consumer demand, margins, and AI‑related spending will shape sentiment well beyond their own tickers. [40]
  3. “Santa Claus rally” dynamics
    • After Wednesday’s surge, many strategists are watching to see whether a classic year‑end “Santa Claus rally” can continue, or whether stretched valuations and AI bubble worries cap further gains. MarketWatch and other outlets note that the Fed’s latest cut has strengthened the case for a seasonal tailwind, but today’s AI‑driven pullback shows that the path may be choppy. [41]
  4. AI spending cycle
    • The Oracle episode highlights how AI capital expenditure has become a critical macro‑theme in its own right. Any sign that big projects are being delayed, scaled back, or failing to deliver promised returns could have outsized effects on high‑growth tech valuations and index‑level performance. [42]

Takeaways: What today’s moves are really about

Putting it all together, U.S. stock market trading today (December 11, 2025) is being driven by three overlapping narratives:

  1. A supportive but cautious Fed
    The central bank cut rates again and effectively took future hikes off the table, but signaled that it’s near neutral and no longer on autopilot toward easier policy. That keeps a floor under valuations but also limits the scope for a sustained “easy money” melt‑up. [43]
  2. AI euphoria vs. bubble anxiety
    Oracle’s earnings miss and aggressive AI capex plans re‑ignite concerns that parts of the market may be replaying the excesses of the early 2000s tech boom. For now, the damage is concentrated in AI‑heavy names and futures, not the entire market. [44]
  3. A cautiously optimistic 2026 outlook
    Most high‑profile forecasts released today suggest that, barring a policy mistake or a sharper downturn in the labor market, the U.S. economy and stock market can grind higher next year—but with more frequent air pockets and a bigger focus on earnings quality. [45]

References

1. www.reuters.com, 2. english.news.cn, 3. english.news.cn, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.dailypress.net, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. english.news.cn, 8. www.timesleaderonline.com, 9. www.timesleaderonline.com, 10. english.news.cn, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. www.reuters.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.dailypress.net, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.dailypress.net, 21. www.dailypress.net, 22. www.timesleaderonline.com, 23. www.timesleaderonline.com, 24. www.reuters.com, 25. www.bloomberg.com, 26. www.bloomberg.com, 27. www.reuters.com, 28. www.reuters.com, 29. www.reuters.com, 30. english.news.cn, 31. www.reuters.com, 32. www.reuters.com, 33. www.realclearmarkets.com, 34. www.reuters.com, 35. www.reuters.com, 36. www.reuters.com, 37. www.reuters.com, 38. www.reuters.com, 39. www.dailypress.net, 40. www.reuters.com, 41. www.marketwatch.com, 42. www.reuters.com, 43. www.dailypress.net, 44. www.reuters.com, 45. www.realclearmarkets.com

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