The major U.S. indexes were showing modest losses Wednesday afternoon, with none of the drama but plenty of the grind. The Dow Jones traded down 0.28% to 48,229.87, while the NASDAQ slipped 0.26% to 23,359.33. The S&P 500 matched that pace, falling 0.26% to 6,878.07. Not exactly a market meltdown, but enough red to keep traders awake.
Sector Snapshot: Real Estate Takes the Hit
Utilities shares held up relatively well, slipping just 0.2% on the day. Real estate stocks weren't as lucky, dipping 0.8% to lead the laggards. It's the kind of rotation that suggests investors are treading carefully rather than making bold bets.
Oil Inventories Drop Harder Than Expected
The headline grabber came from the energy markets. U.S. crude oil inventories, excluding the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, fell by 1.934 million barrels in the week ending December 26. That's the largest weekly decline since mid-November and nearly double the market estimate of a 0.9 million-barrel drop. Oil traded up 0.1% to $58.02 in response—a modest bump considering the size of the inventory draw.
The Day's Big Movers
While the broad market moved sideways, a handful of individual stocks had the kind of day that makes for great (or terrible) dinner party stories.
Intelligent Bio Solutions Inc. (INBS) absolutely exploded, gaining 102% to $8.27 after announcing a strategic manufacturing partnership with Syrma Johari MedTech. The deal is aimed at scaling production of its Intelligent Fingerprinting Drug Screening Reader—apparently investors think this partnership is a game-changer.
Anghami Inc. (ANGH) shares shot up 50% to $3.7306 after the company reported a year-over-year increase in first-half results. Not bad for a midweek earnings surprise.
Vanda Pharmaceuticals Inc. (VNDA) got a boost as well, surging 32% to $9.28. The catalyst? FDA approval of NEREUS for the prevention of vomiting induced by motion. It's a niche indication, but the market clearly sees potential.
On the flip side, Corcept Therapeutics Incorporated (CORT) had a brutal day, dropping 52% to $34.04 after receiving a Complete Response Letter from the FDA for Relacorilant. In FDA-speak, that's a rejection—the agency wants more information before approving the drug, and investors weren't sticking around to see how it plays out.
FuelCell Energy, Inc. (FCEL) shares fell 10% to $7.18 after the company filed for an amended common stock offering. Dilution fears tend to send shares lower, and this was no exception.
SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited Company (SMX) was down 37% to $32.30, though no specific catalyst was immediately apparent.
Commodities: Silver Gets Hammered
Gold traded down 0.8% to $4,351.00, but the real story was silver, which fell a shocking 7.3% to $72.255. Copper also declined, dropping 1.9% to $5.6710. It was a tough day across the precious and industrial metals complex.
Global Markets: Modest Declines Across Europe and Asia
European shares closed lower, with the eurozone's STOXX 600 slipping 0.14%. Spain's IBEX 35 Index fell 0.27%, London's FTSE 100 declined 0.09%, and France's CAC 40 dropped 0.23%.
Asian markets closed mixed on Wednesday. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index fell 0.87%, while China's Shanghai Composite gained 0.09% and India's BSE Sensex rose 0.64%. Not exactly a clear trend, but Asia seems to be shrugging off whatever concerns are weighing on Western markets.
Economic Data: Jobless Claims Beat Expectations
U.S. initial jobless claims declined by 16,000 to 199,000 in the week ending December 27, coming in well below market estimates of 220,000. That's a sign the labor market remains resilient, at least for now. Combined with the sharp drop in crude inventories, the economic data offered a mixed but generally constructive picture.
All in all, it was one of those days where the headlines were more interesting than the index moves. The broad market treaded water while individual stories—FDA decisions, partnerships, and inventory surprises—delivered the action.




