Marketdash

Manufacturing PMI Slips as Oil Retreats 1% and Markets Trade Mixed

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
U.S. stocks showed a mixed performance Friday with the Dow climbing over 100 points while tech stocks slipped. Manufacturing growth cooled as the S&P Global PMI dropped to 51.8 from 52.2, and crude oil fell 1.3% while precious metals rallied with silver jumping 3%.

U.S. markets wrapped up the week with a classic case of internal division. The Dow Jones climbed 0.27% to 48,195.28, adding more than 100 points, while the NASDAQ slipped 0.14% to 23,209.54 and the S&P 500 barely budged, down just 0.01% to 6,845.25. It's the kind of mixed session that makes you wonder if traders are heading into the weekend with confidence or confusion.

Sector Movements Tell the Story

Utilities stocks grabbed the spotlight Friday, climbing 0.8% as investors rotated into defensive plays. On the flip side, consumer discretionary took it on the chin with a 1% decline, suggesting some nervousness about consumer spending heading into the new year.

Manufacturing Data Cools Slightly

The headline economic news came from the S&P Global manufacturing PMI, which slipped to 51.8 in December from 52.2 the previous month. The index is still above 50, meaning manufacturing is technically expanding, but the deceleration suggests the sector might be losing some steam as we head into 2025.

Big Movers on the Upside

ChowChow Cloud International Holdings Limited (CHOW) rocketed 29% to $0.78 after reporting year-over-year increases in both H1 2025 revenue and net income. Not bad for a company trading below a dollar.

Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (IRWD) delivered the real fireworks, surging 43% to $4.80 after issuing FY26 guidance that apparently exceeded expectations. That's the kind of jump that makes you wish you'd paid attention to pharmaceutical guidance releases.

AgEagle Aerial Systems, Inc. (UAVS) also had a strong showing, jumping 35% to $1.10 after announcing it sold six eBee TAC tactical mapping drones to the U.S. Army. Defense contracts have a way of moving small-cap stocks.

The Day's Biggest Losers

Outlook Therapeutics, Inc. (OTLK) crashed 57% to $0.67 following brutal news from the FDA. The agency issued a complete response letter to the company's ONS-5010/LYTENAVA biologics license application resubmission, essentially saying it cannot approve the application in its current form for treating wet age-related macular degeneration. That's regulatory speak for "go back to the drawing board," and investors bolted accordingly.

Intelligent Bio Solutions Inc (INBS) dropped 19% to $7.74 after announcing plans to raise fresh capital. Dilution fears tend to send existing shareholders running for the exits.

Semilux International Ltd. (SELX) fell 20% to $0.65 after receiving a Nasdaq delisting notification. Getting kicked off an exchange rarely improves investor sentiment.

Commodity Markets Mixed

Oil traders continued their retreat, with crude falling 1.3% to $56.67 per barrel. That's a meaningful drop and reflects ongoing concerns about global demand.

The metals market painted a different picture. Gold inched up 0.1% to $4,346.50, but silver stole the show with a 3% surge to $72.685. Copper added 0.1% to $5.6840, suggesting at least some optimism about industrial demand.

Global Market Snapshot

European markets closed mostly higher, with the eurozone's STOXX 600 gaining 0.60%. Spain's IBEX 35 Index rose 0.83%, London's FTSE 100 added 0.32%, and France's CAC 40 climbed 0.29%. Germany's DAX was the outlier, slipping 0.01%.

Asian markets wrapped their Friday session on a positive note. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index surged 2.76%, while India's BSE Sensex gained 0.67%, reflecting continued strength in the region.

Manufacturing PMI Slips as Oil Retreats 1% and Markets Trade Mixed

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
U.S. stocks showed a mixed performance Friday with the Dow climbing over 100 points while tech stocks slipped. Manufacturing growth cooled as the S&P Global PMI dropped to 51.8 from 52.2, and crude oil fell 1.3% while precious metals rallied with silver jumping 3%.

U.S. markets wrapped up the week with a classic case of internal division. The Dow Jones climbed 0.27% to 48,195.28, adding more than 100 points, while the NASDAQ slipped 0.14% to 23,209.54 and the S&P 500 barely budged, down just 0.01% to 6,845.25. It's the kind of mixed session that makes you wonder if traders are heading into the weekend with confidence or confusion.

Sector Movements Tell the Story

Utilities stocks grabbed the spotlight Friday, climbing 0.8% as investors rotated into defensive plays. On the flip side, consumer discretionary took it on the chin with a 1% decline, suggesting some nervousness about consumer spending heading into the new year.

Manufacturing Data Cools Slightly

The headline economic news came from the S&P Global manufacturing PMI, which slipped to 51.8 in December from 52.2 the previous month. The index is still above 50, meaning manufacturing is technically expanding, but the deceleration suggests the sector might be losing some steam as we head into 2025.

Big Movers on the Upside

ChowChow Cloud International Holdings Limited (CHOW) rocketed 29% to $0.78 after reporting year-over-year increases in both H1 2025 revenue and net income. Not bad for a company trading below a dollar.

Ironwood Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (IRWD) delivered the real fireworks, surging 43% to $4.80 after issuing FY26 guidance that apparently exceeded expectations. That's the kind of jump that makes you wish you'd paid attention to pharmaceutical guidance releases.

AgEagle Aerial Systems, Inc. (UAVS) also had a strong showing, jumping 35% to $1.10 after announcing it sold six eBee TAC tactical mapping drones to the U.S. Army. Defense contracts have a way of moving small-cap stocks.

The Day's Biggest Losers

Outlook Therapeutics, Inc. (OTLK) crashed 57% to $0.67 following brutal news from the FDA. The agency issued a complete response letter to the company's ONS-5010/LYTENAVA biologics license application resubmission, essentially saying it cannot approve the application in its current form for treating wet age-related macular degeneration. That's regulatory speak for "go back to the drawing board," and investors bolted accordingly.

Intelligent Bio Solutions Inc (INBS) dropped 19% to $7.74 after announcing plans to raise fresh capital. Dilution fears tend to send existing shareholders running for the exits.

Semilux International Ltd. (SELX) fell 20% to $0.65 after receiving a Nasdaq delisting notification. Getting kicked off an exchange rarely improves investor sentiment.

Commodity Markets Mixed

Oil traders continued their retreat, with crude falling 1.3% to $56.67 per barrel. That's a meaningful drop and reflects ongoing concerns about global demand.

The metals market painted a different picture. Gold inched up 0.1% to $4,346.50, but silver stole the show with a 3% surge to $72.685. Copper added 0.1% to $5.6840, suggesting at least some optimism about industrial demand.

Global Market Snapshot

European markets closed mostly higher, with the eurozone's STOXX 600 gaining 0.60%. Spain's IBEX 35 Index rose 0.83%, London's FTSE 100 added 0.32%, and France's CAC 40 climbed 0.29%. Germany's DAX was the outlier, slipping 0.01%.

Asian markets wrapped their Friday session on a positive note. Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index surged 2.76%, while India's BSE Sensex gained 0.67%, reflecting continued strength in the region.