U.S. stock futures couldn't quite decide which direction to head Monday morning, swinging between modest gains and losses as investors settled in for what promises to be a quiet week. The major indices showed no real consensus, with futures mixed across the board following Friday's lackluster close.
This week won't offer much in terms of economic data fireworks, and markets will stay shuttered Thursday for New Year's Day. If you were hoping for drama, you might need to wait until 2026 actually begins.
Treasury yields painted their own picture Monday morning. The 10-year bond yielded 4.11%, while the two-year sat at 3.47%. According to the CME Group's FedWatch tool, markets are pricing in an 82.8% probability that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates right where they are when policymakers meet in January. Not exactly a surprise given recent Fed commentary.
Futures Mixed to Start the Week
Here's how futures looked early Monday:
- Dow Jones: +0.03%
- S&P 500: -0.22%
- Nasdaq 100: -0.42%
- Russell 2000: +0.04%
The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which track the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 respectively, both traded lower in premarket action. SPY declined 0.25% to $688.61, while QQQ fell 0.46% to $621.05.
Companies Making Moves
Target Catches Activist Attention
Target Corp. (TGT) shares edged up 0.11% in premarket trading after the Financial Times reported that activist investor Toms Capital Investment Management has taken a significant position in the retailer. The exact size of the stake remains under wraps, but activist involvement typically signals potential pressure for strategic changes or operational improvements.
Target maintains stronger price trends over the short and medium terms but shows weakness in long-term momentum, with a poor quality ranking overall. The stock has faced headwinds recently as consumers remain selective about discretionary spending.
Sable Offshore Hit by Environmental Lawsuit
Sable Offshore Corp. (SOC) shares tumbled 2.34% following an emergency lawsuit filed by environmental groups attempting to block the Trump administration's approval for restarting the Las Flores pipeline. The lawsuit alleges unaddressed safety issues could lead to another environmental disaster, throwing uncertainty into the company's operational plans.
Sable Offshore shows a stronger price trend over the short term but exhibits weaker momentum in both medium and long-term time frames, suggesting recent gains may lack staying power.
Bolt Projects Surges on Revenue Forecast
Bolt Projects Holdings Inc. (BSLK) rocketed 25.19% higher after announcing preliminary results for the fourth quarter and full year 2025. The company expects 2025 revenue to jump 200% year-over-year to $4.5 million. That's impressive percentage growth, though from a relatively small base.
Despite the revenue momentum, Bolt Projects maintains weaker price trends across short, medium, and long-term periods, indicating the stock has been under pressure before this announcement provided a spark.
Taiwan Semiconductor Wobbles After Earthquake
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (TSM) slipped 0.54% after a powerful earthquake struck near Taiwan, raising fresh investor concerns about potential production disruptions. Given Taiwan Semi's crucial role in global chip manufacturing, any threat to operations tends to ripple through tech supply chains.
The semiconductor giant maintains stronger price trends across short, medium, and long-term periods, with a moderate value ranking. Its fundamental position remains solid despite the earthquake jitters.
Coupang Rallies on Massive Settlement
Coupang Inc. (CPNG) climbed 2.68% after announcing a data breach settlement that involves distributing over $1 billion in vouchers to 33.7 million affected customers starting January 2026. That's a hefty settlement, though vouchers rather than cash payments may limit the actual financial impact.
Coupang shows weaker price trends over the short, medium, and long term, though it maintains a solid growth ranking. The settlement removes an overhang that may have been weighing on investor sentiment.
How Friday's Session Ended
Most S&P 500 sectors closed lower Friday, with consumer discretionary, energy, and financials leading the declines. Materials and information technology bucked the trend, managing to finish in positive territory.
Here's where the major indices settled:
- Nasdaq Composite: -0.09% to 23,593.10
- S&P 500: -0.03% to 6,929.94
- Dow Jones: -0.04% to 48,710.97
- Russell 2000: -0.54% to 2,534.35
Analyst Perspective: Geo-Economics Takes Center Stage
Mohamed El-Erian offered his final analysis of 2025, characterizing the U.S. economy as fundamentally robust but complicated by persistent inflation and rising geopolitical influence. It's not exactly a simple story heading into the new year.
El-Erian highlighted that third-quarter GDP growth exceeded expectations, driven by "household consumption and AI-related capital spending." But he cautioned that high prices remain a "persistent reminder of price pressures" for many households, creating a disconnect between headline economic strength and consumer sentiment.
Looking ahead, El-Erian expects market dynamics to shift away from traditional fundamentals toward what he calls "geo-economics," where "geopolitics, national security and domestic politics" outweigh standard commercial logic. That's a significant departure from how markets have typically functioned, where earnings, interest rates, and growth prospects dominated.
He anticipates this trend will become particularly relevant as the U.S. enters the 2026 mid-term election year, likely forcing political responses to voter dissatisfaction with economic conditions. Even if GDP numbers look healthy, if voters feel squeezed by prices, politicians will respond.
Although the immediate week ahead should be quiet in terms of economic data, El-Erian cautioned investors to remain vigilant about the "outsized influence of geopolitics." He specifically cited tensions in Venezuela and the Russia-Ukraine conflict as key focal points that could disrupt the broader market narrative. When geopolitics intrudes, traditional technical analysis and fundamental models often take a back seat.
Economic Calendar This Week
The economic data calendar remains light this week, fitting for a holiday-shortened period. Here's what's on tap:
Monday: November pending home sales data releases at 10:00 a.m. ET.
Tuesday: October S&P Case-Shiller home price index for 20 cities arrives at 9:00 a.m., December Chicago Business Barometer (PMI) comes out at 9:45 a.m., and minutes from the Fed's December FOMC meeting release at 2:00 p.m. ET. Those Fed minutes could offer additional insight into policymakers' thinking, though the main decisions have already been telegraphed.
Wednesday: Initial jobless claims for the week ending December 27 release at 8:30 a.m. ET.
Thursday and Friday: No scheduled data releases. Thursday is New Year's Day with markets closed.
Commodities, Currencies, and Crypto
Crude oil futures traded higher in early New York trading, climbing 2.01% to hover around $57.88 per barrel. Energy markets have been choppy recently as demand concerns compete with supply dynamics.
Gold Spot fell 1.42% to trade around $4,468.34 per ounce, pulling back from its recent record high of $4,550.11 per ounce. The precious metal has been volatile as investors weigh inflation concerns against interest rate expectations.
The U.S. Dollar Index edged 0.01% lower to the 98.0120 level, showing minimal movement as currency markets waited for fresh catalysts.
Bitcoin (BTC) traded 0.04% higher at $87,895.22, continuing its range-bound trading pattern as crypto markets search for direction heading into the new year.
Global Markets Mostly Lower
Asian markets closed mostly lower Monday, with South Korea's Kospi index being the lone exception. Australia's ASX 200, India's Nifty 50, China's CSI 300, Hong Kong's Hang Seng, and Japan's Nikkei 225 all declined. The weakness in Asian markets reflected cautious positioning ahead of the new year.
European markets also traded lower in early action, following the downbeat Asian session as investors remained risk-averse to start the week.




