"'Twas the week before Christmas and all through the Market
Every trader was screening for one last 10x target
The AI was running in the data center at full bore
In the hopes that a new Fed Chair would cut rates even more
The hedge funds were looking at their books with cheer
But praying a Trump tweet wouldn’t blow up their year
When out in commodities, gold took off in a run
Only for Silver to say you think that’s cool? Watch this son.
As the crypto investments were stuck in the mud
Down even more, crude oil came with a thud
However, A look at the charts with a long-term view
Came a realization that ups and downs are nothing new
As we close out this year and look forward to next
Merry Christmas to all. May next year’s returns be your best yet."
-Probably not Clement Clarke Moore
Quick programming note: Beginning next week and until the New Year, we'll be sending out our daily "Mid-Day" email in the morning, around the Open.
The last few weeks of the year are a special time in the markets. Holiday-shortened work weeks, trading desks on vacation, year-end tax loss selling and portfolio window-dressing are among the dynamics that converge at this time, often playing a role in inducing the fabled Santa Claus rally. We can add a Triple Witching and Index rebalance to top this week off, like a silk hat on a snowman.
Before traders and investors could put a bow on 2025, the overhang of the last Federal Reserve meeting of the year had to be addressed. That was accomplished last week, and it helped set the path to the end of the year and position things for beginning of 2026- at least until everything gets tossed around with a new Fed chair. The Fed cut rates as expected and Doves got some stocking stuffers when Chair Powell wasn’t as hawkish as he could have been while kick-starting a new asset purchase program to help stabilize bank reserves. Equities rallied post-meeting and the day after, but sold off on Friday as the S&P fell 1% and the Russell 1.5%. For the week, the S&P 500 fell 0.6%, but the equal-weight index was the mirror image, gaining 0.7% while the Russell gained over 1% and reached an all-time high. A look under the hood showed growth and techy Mega Cap names sold-off, exemplified by post-earnings weakness in Oracle and Broadcom. Meanwhile sectors like Materials, Financials and the small caps easily outperformed. Since the Fed cut, the 2y yield is down ~6bp, but the 10y is flat and the 30y is up 6bp, steepening the treasury curve as future debt issuance, central bank independence, growth outlooks and inflation paths slam into each other.