NEW YORK — 26.12.2025 — U.S. stocks were quiet but resilient in mid‑morning trading Friday, with Wall Street largely hovering near record territory as investors leaned into a familiar late‑December script: thin holiday volume, “Santa Claus rally” seasonality, and a growing tug‑of‑war over what 2026 will deliver for rates, earnings, and the AI boom. [1]
Market snapshot at 10:14 a.m. EST: flat-to-firm, with record levels still in view
By mid‑morning, the major indexes were edging higher by fractions, reflecting more “positioning and patience” than aggressive risk‑taking in the post‑Christmas lull.
- Dow Jones Industrial Average: around 48,742, up about 0.02%
- S&P 500: around 6,942, up about 0.14% (and flirting with the psychological 7,000 milestone)
- Nasdaq Composite: around 23,656, up about 0.17% [2]
ETFs tracking the big benchmarks told the same story: minimal moves and a tight trading range in early hours.
Why the calm? Friday’s tape is being shaped by holiday-thinned liquidity, where even modest orders can move prices—but where many institutional desks remain in year‑end mode, waiting for the next macro catalyst and the first full week of January. [3]
What’s driving the market this morning: rate-cut optimism and earnings confidence
The dominant backdrop is simple: investors continue to bet that cooling inflation and a softening (but not breaking) economy keep the Federal Reserve on a rate-cut path, while corporate America—so far—keeps delivering enough earnings momentum to justify elevated equity valuations.
A key theme heading into the final trading days of 2025 is that the market is trying to finish strong without relying solely on mega-cap tech—a narrative reinforced by ongoing talk of rotation into other sectors. [4]
The next big macro marker: Fed minutes (and the rate path)
Investors are looking ahead to the minutes from the Fed’s December 9–10 meeting, scheduled for Tuesday, Dec. 30 at 2:00 p.m. ET, for clues on how unified—or divided—policymakers are about the next phase of easing. [5]
That matters because the Fed’s most recent moves have already shifted the playing field: policymakers cut rates multiple times late in 2025, and markets are now hyper‑focused on how many cuts come next and how soon they arrive. [6]
Santa Claus rally watch: seasonality turns into a real-time test
The market’s late‑December performance often gets framed through one famous seasonal window: the “Santa Claus rally,” typically defined as the last five trading days of the year plus the first two trading days of January—a stretch many traders monitor as a sentiment barometer. [7]
This year, that period began Wednesday and runs through Jan. 5, putting Friday’s session squarely inside the “Santa” window. [8]
And December 26 has its own reputation. One widely cited seasonal study (via Bespoke Investment Group) suggests Dec. 26 has historically been unusually positive for the S&P 500 when the market is open—one reason traders are paying attention even in a low‑volume session. [9]
Sector check: tech leads, defensives lag (for now)
In early action, six of the S&P 500’s 11 sectors were higher, led by information technology, while utilities and industrials trailed—consistent with a market that’s still willing to buy growth exposure when rates are expected to drift lower. [10]
At the same time, the broader late‑year storyline remains that non‑tech areas have been showing more life lately, supporting the idea that the rally may be widening beyond the “Magnificent Seven.” [11]
Stock movers making headlines today
Even on a slow holiday tape, a handful of company-specific moves are providing traction.
Nvidia rises on Groq licensing and talent deal
Nvidia traded higher after news it would license inference-focused chip technology from startup Groq and hire key Groq executives, a development that underscores how competitive—and strategically important—AI inference has become. [12]
Coupang jumps after data-breach update
E-commerce player Coupang surged after saying leaked customer information tied to a South Korea incident had been deleted by the suspect—fueling a relief rally in the shares. [13]
Biohaven slips after trial disappointment
Biotech Biohaven fell after reporting its experimental depression treatment missed the main goal of a mid-stage trial, continuing a difficult stretch for the name in 2025. [14]
Precious metal miners gain as gold and silver hit fresh highs
U.S.-listed precious metals miners moved up as gold and silver notched new records again, keeping the commodities-to-equities linkage alive even while the broader market treaded water. [15]
The “other market” story today: precious metals are stealing the spotlight
If equities are whispering, precious metals are shouting.
Silver pushed above $75/oz for the first time, while gold climbed to fresh records—moves attributed to a mix of rate-cut expectations, geopolitical unease, and low liquidity that can amplify price swings during holiday weeks. [16]
For equity investors, the metals surge matters in two ways:
- It reinforces the market’s belief in lower U.S. rates ahead, which typically supports both gold and long-duration growth assets. [17]
- It’s a reminder that cross‑asset volatility can reappear quickly when trading conditions are thin—especially into year‑end. [18]
2026 outlook: bullish targets vs. “prove it” skepticism
As the calendar flips, the market conversation is shifting from “How strong was 2025?” to “How sustainable is this in 2026?”—especially with the S&P 500 sitting near major psychological levels.
The bull case: modest upside, powered by earnings and easier policy
A common optimistic framework heading into 2026 looks like this:
- Earnings growth remains solid (and ideally broadens beyond a handful of mega-cap AI winners). [19]
- The Fed continues easing without triggering a recession. [20]
- Investors rotate into under-owned sectors, keeping the index supported even if tech cools. [21]
Some of the most widely circulated “base case” targets still imply upside in 2026, though often more moderate than the last three years. For example, one broad strategist roundup cited an average 2026 year‑end S&P 500 target around 7,269 (about mid‑single‑digit upside from recent record levels), while warning that volatility and concentration risks remain. [22]
The high-conviction bullish call: S&P 500 at 7,700 by end‑2026
UBS has argued that 2026 catalysts could matter more than a year‑end sprint, projecting S&P 500 earnings growth of ~10% and a 7,700 target for the index by end‑2026—while also pointing to additional rate cuts and shifting Fed leadership as potential tailwinds. [23]
The bear (or at least cautious) case: “rotation, not crash”—but index returns could be negative
Not all forecasts are upbeat. GMO’s Ben Inker warned that the S&P 500 in 2026 is “more likely to be down than up,” not because everything is in a bubble, but because AI-heavy concentration could drag the index if the most expensive names cool off—even if cheaper parts of the market hold up better. [24]
The big question cutting across every forecast: Can AI investment justify the price?
A recurring theme in both bullish and cautious outlooks is AI spending—and whether companies can translate massive infrastructure outlays into real productivity and margin gains.
In today’s trading narrative, that shows up as a simple “prove it” challenge: investors still like the AI story, but they are increasingly sensitive to evidence that spending turns into profits (not just headlines). [25]
What to watch after 10:14 a.m.: the year-end checklist for traders
With no major U.S. economic reports scheduled for Dec. 26, catalysts are more market-structure and narrative-driven than data-driven today. [26]
Here’s what market participants are monitoring into the close—and into next week:
- Liquidity and rebalancing: end‑of‑year flows can create sudden bursts of volatility in otherwise sleepy sessions. [27]
- Fed minutes on Dec. 30: confirmation (or contradiction) of the market’s rate-cut assumptions could quickly move yields, tech leadership, and index levels. [28]
- The S&P 500 and 7,000: whether the benchmark can convincingly clear (or reject) the round-number level may shape early‑January sentiment. [29]
- Santa Claus rally performance through Jan. 5: traders will be watching whether the seasonal window delivers a tailwind—or becomes a warning light. [30]
Bottom line at 10:14 a.m. EST
The U.S. stock market is steady and near record peaks in a low-volume post‑Christmas session, with the S&P 500 still pressing toward 7,000. For now, the market is balancing year-end calm with a very 2026-focused debate: how many rate cuts arrive, how broad earnings growth becomes, and whether AI’s massive investment cycle translates into measurable profits. [31]
References
1. www.marketscreener.com, 2. www.marketscreener.com, 3. www.marketscreener.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.federalreserve.gov, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.marketscreener.com, 8. www.marketscreener.com, 9. www.marketwatch.com, 10. www.marketscreener.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. www.marketscreener.com, 14. www.marketscreener.com, 15. www.marketscreener.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.investopedia.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.investopedia.com, 23. www.ubs.com, 24. www.businessinsider.com, 25. www.marketscreener.com, 26. www.marketwatch.com, 27. www.reuters.com, 28. www.federalreserve.gov, 29. www.reuters.com, 30. www.marketscreener.com, 31. www.marketscreener.com


