Christmas week trading opened with fireworks in the precious metals market, where gold and silver both punched through to fresh record highs in a synchronized rally that's becoming harder to ignore.
Gold surged 2.3% to reach $4,440 per ounce, marking its strongest single-day move in more than a month. That puts the yellow metal up a staggering 67% year-to-date. Not to be outdone, silver jumped 2.1% and is now flirting with the psychologically significant $70 level. The white metal has been the real showstopper this year, delivering a 133% return that's nearly double gold's already impressive performance.
The mining stocks loved it. The VanEck Gold Miners ETF (GDX) rocketed 3.6% higher, while the Global X Silver Miners ETF (SLV) jumped an even more impressive 5%. When the underlying commodities are hitting records, the leveraged plays on those commodities tend to have a very good day.
Equities Join the Party
It wasn't just precious metals having fun. All major U.S. equity benchmarks extended gains for a third consecutive session, heading into what's historically one of the strongest stretches of the calendar year. Small caps were particularly enthusiastic, with the Russell 2000 climbing 1.8% to lead the charge. The S&P 500 rose 0.7% to 6,886, trading less than 1% below its record highs. The tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 added 0.6%.
Monday's session was notably light on catalysts. There were no major macroeconomic releases and no corporate earnings to speak of, leaving investors mainly focused on positioning ahead of Tuesday's second estimate of third-quarter GDP. Treasury yields barely budged, with the 10-year note hovering around 4.15%.
The market's risk-on tone was perhaps most visible in what didn't work. Defensive sectors got hammered as money rotated into more cyclical plays. Consumer staples slid 1%, making it the weakest performer on the day. Utilities, real estate, and health care also traded modestly lower. When the safe havens are getting sold off, it's usually a sign that investors are feeling confident enough to take more risk.
Media Megadeal Drama Continues
The big corporate news of the day came from Hollywood. Paramount Skydance Corp. (PSKY) adjusted its hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. (WBD), maintaining its $30-per-share all-cash offer worth about $108.4 billion. The sweetener? A roughly $40.4 billion irrevocable personal guarantee from Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison. When you need to make a deal happen, it apparently helps to have one of the world's wealthiest individuals personally backstop a significant chunk of it.
Paramount (PSKY) shares jumped 5% on the announcement. Meanwhile, Netflix Inc. (NFLX) slipped 0.8%, perhaps on concerns about further consolidation in the streaming wars creating even larger competitors.
In the crypto world, Bitcoin (BTC) advanced 1% to $89,600, heading for its fourth straight positive close and tracking the broader risk-on sentiment flowing through traditional markets.
The Scorecard
By midday in New York, the major indices were showing solid gains across the board. The Nasdaq 100 stood at 25,511, up 0.6%. The S&P 500 hit 6,886, up 0.7%. The Dow Jones climbed 0.6% to 48,446. And the Russell 2000 small-cap index led the pack at 2,572, up 1.8%.
Among the major ETFs, the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) held essentially flat at $688.57. The SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA) moved 0.6% higher to $484.46. The Invesco QQQ Trust Series (QQQ) gained 0.6% to $255.11. The iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) traded at $257.23, reflecting the small-cap strength.
Sector performance told the story of Monday's market character. The Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLF) outperformed with a 0.9% gain, while the Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLP) lagged badly, down 1.0%.
Individual Stock Movers
Looking at individual names in the Russell 1000, space stocks dominated the winner's circle. AST SpaceMobile, Inc. (ASTS) jumped 12.24% to lead all gainers. Rocket Lab Corporation (RKLB) wasn't far behind with a 9.64% surge. Karman Holdings Inc. (KRMN) added 8.30%, while Iridium Communications Inc. (IRDM) climbed 5.82%. Rounding out the top five was First Solar, Inc. (FSLR), up 5.53%.
On the losing side, Trump Media & Technology Group Corp. (DJT) dropped 7.83% to lead decliners. Dillard's, Inc. (DDS) fell 6.90%, while Dominion Energy, Inc. (D) slid 4.48%. SanDisk Corporation (SNDK) declined 3.57%, and Carvana Co. (CVNA) dropped 3.50%.
With the holiday week just getting started and volume likely to remain thin, positioning matters more than usual. The combination of record highs in precious metals, small-cap strength, and defensive weakness suggests investors are leaning into risk heading into year-end. Whether that's justified or just thin trading amplifying momentum is the question markets will answer in the days ahead.




