December is supposed to be the market's comfort food season. Historically, it's been smooth sailing with predictable gains, the kind of month that lets portfolio managers dream about year-end bonuses. But if strategists are reading the tea leaves correctly, this December might serve up something entirely different: heightened volatility, shaky megacaps, and a notable absence of holiday cheer.
The shift has investors eyeing a different playbook, one that favors defensive positioning and dispersion strategies over the usual year-end victory lap.
When Protection Trumps Optimism
Amy Wu Silverman from RBC told Yahoo Finance that investors are leaning harder into downside protection rather than betting on the traditional seasonal lift. That behavioral shift puts volatility-linked ETFs front and center: the ProShares VIX Short-Term Futures ETF (VIXY), ProShares VIX Mid-Term Futures ETF (VIXM), and ProShares Ultra VIX Short-Term Futures ETF (UVXY).
Normally, December volatility trades are about as exciting as watching paint dry. The financial world essentially goes into hibernation mode after Thanksgiving. But this year's storyline has been anything but sleepy. Earlier market shocks including DeepSeek's collapse, unexpected tariff announcements, and wild swings in AI valuations have kept traders on edge. Silverman's warning about "volatility potholes" suggests these funds could see significant action if markets hit another rough patch.
The Momentum Trade Shows Cracks
Omar Aguilar, CEO of Schwab Asset Management, pointed out to Yahoo Finance that growing dispersion is emerging beneath the market's surface. Translation: the momentum trade that's dominated for months is starting to wobble. When the handful of stocks that have been carrying the market start to stumble, other opportunities emerge.
That environment sets up the Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF (RSP) as a potential beneficiary if megacaps finally loosen their iron grip on market leadership. Meanwhile, defensive strategies like the iShares MSCI USA Minimum Volatility Factor ETF (USMV) could shine if December delivers the choppiness that many are anticipating.
Tech's Wild Ride Continues
Megacap technology stocks have whipsawed markets in recent weeks, sending tech-heavy ETFs on an unusually wild ride. The Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ), Invesco NASDAQ Next Gen 100 ETF (QQQJ), iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV), iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX), and VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) have all experienced unseasonable turbulence.
The culprit? AI-induced uncertainty that's fundamentally rewriting how markets behave. When the stocks that everyone thought were one-way bets start moving in both directions with equal enthusiasm, it creates the kind of environment where traditional seasonal patterns break down.
This December, the real story might not be about whether Santa's rally shows up. It might be about which ETFs can hold steady when the sleigh refuses to take flight and investors realize that sometimes the best holiday gift is simply not losing money.