Marketdash

Markets Mixed as Investors Brace for Wave of Economic Data While AAR, Mobileye, and Penguin Solutions Make Moves

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
U.S. stock futures showed a mixed picture Wednesday morning as investors prepared for key economic releases including the ADP employment report and ISM services index. The Dow edged higher while tech-heavy indices dipped, setting up a data-heavy session that could shape market sentiment heading into the new year.

Wednesday morning brought investors a familiar sight lately: markets that couldn't quite make up their mind which direction to head. U.S. stock futures were showing a split personality, with Dow futures inching up 0.04% while S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures slipped 0.10% and 0.26%, respectively. The Russell 2000 futures barely budged, up just 0.02%.

This comes on the heels of Tuesday's solid performance, where the Dow Jones pushed roughly 1% higher to notch fresh record peaks as investors rotated into blue-chip names. But Wednesday's cautious tone makes sense when you consider what's on the calendar: a packed slate of economic data that could give markets a clearer picture of where the economy stands as we kick off 2026.

The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which track the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 indices respectively, reflected this mixed sentiment in premarket trading. SPY dipped 0.11% to $691.08, while QQQ advanced 0.29% to $621.83, according to market data.

Over in the bond market, the 10-year Treasury yield was sitting at 4.15%, while the two-year bond yielded 3.46%. Meanwhile, the CME Group's FedWatch tool showed traders pricing in an 83.9% likelihood that the Federal Reserve will leave interest rates unchanged at their January meeting. In other words, the market isn't expecting any surprises from the central bank just yet.

Companies Making Headlines

AAR Corp. Takes Off on Strong Forecast

AAR Corp. (AIR) jumped 5.07% in premarket trading after delivering better-than-expected second-quarter results and issuing guidance that exceeded analyst expectations. The aerospace and defense company said it expects third-quarter sales between $813.840 million and $827.404 million, well above the market consensus of $793.438 million.

The stock maintains a stronger price trend across short, medium, and long-term timeframes, combined with a moderate quality ranking based on market analysis. The company's performance suggests continued momentum in the aerospace sector as demand remains robust.

Penguin Solutions Beats Expectations

Penguin Solutions Inc. (PENG) shares climbed 4.41% in premarket action after the company reported first-quarter financial results that topped analyst estimates. The high-performance computing solutions provider has been showing strength across multiple timeframes, maintaining stronger price trends over short, medium, and long terms with a moderate value ranking.

Mobileye Makes Big Bet on Humanoid Robotics

Perhaps the most eye-catching move came from Mobileye Global Inc. (MBLY), which rocketed 11% higher after announcing a definitive agreement to acquire AI-first humanoid robotics company Mentee Robotics for approximately $900 million. The autonomous driving technology company aims to combine its self-driving capabilities with Mentee's robotic platform to lead what it's calling the "Physical AI" market.

It's an interesting strategic pivot that shows how companies in the autonomous vehicle space are thinking beyond just cars. The stock maintains a weaker price trend over the long term but has shown strong momentum in the short and medium terms, suggesting investors are warming up to the company's direction.

Ventyx Biosciences Soars on Acquisition Buzz

Ventyx Biosciences Inc. (VTYX) absolutely exploded in premarket trading, surging 67.76% following reports that Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly & Co. (LLY) is in advanced talks to acquire the company for more than $1 billion. When acquisition rumors start floating around at valuations like that, you can understand why shareholders get excited.

The biotech company maintains a stronger price trend over short, medium, and long terms, which likely made it an attractive target. These kinds of biotech acquisitions are often about pipeline potential and strategic fit, and clearly Eli Lilly sees something it wants.

Constellation Brands Awaits Earnings

Constellation Brands Inc. (STZ) shares edged 0.50% higher ahead of its quarterly earnings report scheduled for after the closing bell. Analysts are expecting the beer and spirits company to post earnings of $2.64 per share on revenue of $2.16 billion.

The stock shows strength over short and medium terms but has struggled in the long term, maintaining a moderate quality ranking. Investors will be watching to see how the company's beer portfolio performed during the holiday season and what management has to say about consumer trends.

What Happened Tuesday

Tuesday's session was a good one for most investors, with broad-based gains across major indices. The Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.65% to close at 23,547.17, while the S&P 500 advanced 0.62% to 6,944.82. The Dow Jones led the charge with a 0.99% gain to reach 49,462.08, and the Russell 2000 posted the strongest performance with a 1.37% jump to 2,582.90.

Materials, health care, and industrials stocks led the gains on the S&P 500, though energy and communication services sectors bucked the trend and closed lower. It was one of those days where the rotation into blue-chip names really showed itself, with investors seemingly looking for quality as they navigate the early days of 2026.

What the Strategists Are Saying

BlackRock is maintaining an optimistic stance heading into 2026, advocating what they call a "risk-on" approach driven by structural shifts rather than traditional macroeconomic indicators. After U.S. stocks gained 16.6% in 2025, the asset management giant expects continued strength in equities, supported by "strong corporate earnings, driven in part by the AI theme" and further Federal Reserve easing.

The firm laid out three key lessons guiding their 2026 strategy. First, "immutable economic laws," such as the difficulty of quickly rewiring supply chains, will limit policy extremes. Translation: don't expect any sudden dramatic shifts in the economic landscape, even if political rhetoric suggests otherwise.

Second, and perhaps more interestingly, BlackRock argues that "mega forces, especially AI, the dominant mega force, trump traditional macro." In other words, they're encouraging investors to look past short-term volatility and focus on the bigger structural trends reshaping the economy. Consequently, BlackRock remains overweight on U.S. and Japanese equities, viewing AI as a driver of fundamental transformation rather than just a temporary investment theme.

On the economic front, BlackRock anticipates the data picture will become clearer in the months ahead, expecting a "cleaner read on the labor market and inflation" after recent noise. However, they warn that reliable historical anchors like stable inflation have weakened, requiring investors to take a more active approach rather than relying on old playbooks.

Economic Data on Deck

Wednesday is shaping up to be a busy day for economic releases. December's ADP employment report hits at 8:30 a.m. ET, which will give investors a preview of what to expect from Friday's official jobs report. Then at 10:00 a.m., we'll get December's ISM services index data, November's job openings data, and October's U.S. factory orders numbers.

That's a lot of information to digest, and each piece could move markets depending on whether the numbers come in hot or cold. Later in the day, Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman will speak at 4:10 p.m. ET, and traders will be parsing her comments for any hints about the central bank's thinking on monetary policy.

Commodities, Crypto, and Global Markets

Crude oil futures were trading lower in the early New York session, down 1.02% to hover around $56.55 per barrel. That's a pretty significant decline and reflects ongoing concerns about global demand.

Gold Spot fell 0.70% to trade around $4,463.46 per ounce, backing off from its recent record high of $4,550.11 per ounce. The precious metal has been on quite a run lately, so a little profit-taking isn't surprising. The U.S. Dollar Index spot was 0.04% higher at the 98.6200 level, showing modest strength.

Meanwhile, Bitcoin was trading 1.74% lower at $91,732.77 per coin, continuing its recent volatility as cryptocurrency markets digest the start of a new year without the momentum that carried them through much of 2025.

Asian markets closed mixed on Wednesday. South Korea's KOSPI and Australia's ASX 200 indices managed to post gains, but China's CSI 300, Japan's Nikkei 225, Hong Kong's Hang Seng, and India's Nifty 50 indices all declined. European markets were showing mostly higher in early trading, suggesting a somewhat more optimistic tone across the Atlantic.

With all this economic data dropping throughout the day, investors have plenty to chew on. The question now is whether the numbers will confirm the soft-landing narrative that's been supporting markets or throw up some warning signs that make traders more cautious heading into earnings season.

Markets Mixed as Investors Brace for Wave of Economic Data While AAR, Mobileye, and Penguin Solutions Make Moves

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
U.S. stock futures showed a mixed picture Wednesday morning as investors prepared for key economic releases including the ADP employment report and ISM services index. The Dow edged higher while tech-heavy indices dipped, setting up a data-heavy session that could shape market sentiment heading into the new year.

Wednesday morning brought investors a familiar sight lately: markets that couldn't quite make up their mind which direction to head. U.S. stock futures were showing a split personality, with Dow futures inching up 0.04% while S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures slipped 0.10% and 0.26%, respectively. The Russell 2000 futures barely budged, up just 0.02%.

This comes on the heels of Tuesday's solid performance, where the Dow Jones pushed roughly 1% higher to notch fresh record peaks as investors rotated into blue-chip names. But Wednesday's cautious tone makes sense when you consider what's on the calendar: a packed slate of economic data that could give markets a clearer picture of where the economy stands as we kick off 2026.

The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which track the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 indices respectively, reflected this mixed sentiment in premarket trading. SPY dipped 0.11% to $691.08, while QQQ advanced 0.29% to $621.83, according to market data.

Over in the bond market, the 10-year Treasury yield was sitting at 4.15%, while the two-year bond yielded 3.46%. Meanwhile, the CME Group's FedWatch tool showed traders pricing in an 83.9% likelihood that the Federal Reserve will leave interest rates unchanged at their January meeting. In other words, the market isn't expecting any surprises from the central bank just yet.

Companies Making Headlines

AAR Corp. Takes Off on Strong Forecast

AAR Corp. (AIR) jumped 5.07% in premarket trading after delivering better-than-expected second-quarter results and issuing guidance that exceeded analyst expectations. The aerospace and defense company said it expects third-quarter sales between $813.840 million and $827.404 million, well above the market consensus of $793.438 million.

The stock maintains a stronger price trend across short, medium, and long-term timeframes, combined with a moderate quality ranking based on market analysis. The company's performance suggests continued momentum in the aerospace sector as demand remains robust.

Penguin Solutions Beats Expectations

Penguin Solutions Inc. (PENG) shares climbed 4.41% in premarket action after the company reported first-quarter financial results that topped analyst estimates. The high-performance computing solutions provider has been showing strength across multiple timeframes, maintaining stronger price trends over short, medium, and long terms with a moderate value ranking.

Mobileye Makes Big Bet on Humanoid Robotics

Perhaps the most eye-catching move came from Mobileye Global Inc. (MBLY), which rocketed 11% higher after announcing a definitive agreement to acquire AI-first humanoid robotics company Mentee Robotics for approximately $900 million. The autonomous driving technology company aims to combine its self-driving capabilities with Mentee's robotic platform to lead what it's calling the "Physical AI" market.

It's an interesting strategic pivot that shows how companies in the autonomous vehicle space are thinking beyond just cars. The stock maintains a weaker price trend over the long term but has shown strong momentum in the short and medium terms, suggesting investors are warming up to the company's direction.

Ventyx Biosciences Soars on Acquisition Buzz

Ventyx Biosciences Inc. (VTYX) absolutely exploded in premarket trading, surging 67.76% following reports that Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly & Co. (LLY) is in advanced talks to acquire the company for more than $1 billion. When acquisition rumors start floating around at valuations like that, you can understand why shareholders get excited.

The biotech company maintains a stronger price trend over short, medium, and long terms, which likely made it an attractive target. These kinds of biotech acquisitions are often about pipeline potential and strategic fit, and clearly Eli Lilly sees something it wants.

Constellation Brands Awaits Earnings

Constellation Brands Inc. (STZ) shares edged 0.50% higher ahead of its quarterly earnings report scheduled for after the closing bell. Analysts are expecting the beer and spirits company to post earnings of $2.64 per share on revenue of $2.16 billion.

The stock shows strength over short and medium terms but has struggled in the long term, maintaining a moderate quality ranking. Investors will be watching to see how the company's beer portfolio performed during the holiday season and what management has to say about consumer trends.

What Happened Tuesday

Tuesday's session was a good one for most investors, with broad-based gains across major indices. The Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.65% to close at 23,547.17, while the S&P 500 advanced 0.62% to 6,944.82. The Dow Jones led the charge with a 0.99% gain to reach 49,462.08, and the Russell 2000 posted the strongest performance with a 1.37% jump to 2,582.90.

Materials, health care, and industrials stocks led the gains on the S&P 500, though energy and communication services sectors bucked the trend and closed lower. It was one of those days where the rotation into blue-chip names really showed itself, with investors seemingly looking for quality as they navigate the early days of 2026.

What the Strategists Are Saying

BlackRock is maintaining an optimistic stance heading into 2026, advocating what they call a "risk-on" approach driven by structural shifts rather than traditional macroeconomic indicators. After U.S. stocks gained 16.6% in 2025, the asset management giant expects continued strength in equities, supported by "strong corporate earnings, driven in part by the AI theme" and further Federal Reserve easing.

The firm laid out three key lessons guiding their 2026 strategy. First, "immutable economic laws," such as the difficulty of quickly rewiring supply chains, will limit policy extremes. Translation: don't expect any sudden dramatic shifts in the economic landscape, even if political rhetoric suggests otherwise.

Second, and perhaps more interestingly, BlackRock argues that "mega forces, especially AI, the dominant mega force, trump traditional macro." In other words, they're encouraging investors to look past short-term volatility and focus on the bigger structural trends reshaping the economy. Consequently, BlackRock remains overweight on U.S. and Japanese equities, viewing AI as a driver of fundamental transformation rather than just a temporary investment theme.

On the economic front, BlackRock anticipates the data picture will become clearer in the months ahead, expecting a "cleaner read on the labor market and inflation" after recent noise. However, they warn that reliable historical anchors like stable inflation have weakened, requiring investors to take a more active approach rather than relying on old playbooks.

Economic Data on Deck

Wednesday is shaping up to be a busy day for economic releases. December's ADP employment report hits at 8:30 a.m. ET, which will give investors a preview of what to expect from Friday's official jobs report. Then at 10:00 a.m., we'll get December's ISM services index data, November's job openings data, and October's U.S. factory orders numbers.

That's a lot of information to digest, and each piece could move markets depending on whether the numbers come in hot or cold. Later in the day, Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman will speak at 4:10 p.m. ET, and traders will be parsing her comments for any hints about the central bank's thinking on monetary policy.

Commodities, Crypto, and Global Markets

Crude oil futures were trading lower in the early New York session, down 1.02% to hover around $56.55 per barrel. That's a pretty significant decline and reflects ongoing concerns about global demand.

Gold Spot fell 0.70% to trade around $4,463.46 per ounce, backing off from its recent record high of $4,550.11 per ounce. The precious metal has been on quite a run lately, so a little profit-taking isn't surprising. The U.S. Dollar Index spot was 0.04% higher at the 98.6200 level, showing modest strength.

Meanwhile, Bitcoin was trading 1.74% lower at $91,732.77 per coin, continuing its recent volatility as cryptocurrency markets digest the start of a new year without the momentum that carried them through much of 2025.

Asian markets closed mixed on Wednesday. South Korea's KOSPI and Australia's ASX 200 indices managed to post gains, but China's CSI 300, Japan's Nikkei 225, Hong Kong's Hang Seng, and India's Nifty 50 indices all declined. European markets were showing mostly higher in early trading, suggesting a somewhat more optimistic tone across the Atlantic.

With all this economic data dropping throughout the day, investors have plenty to chew on. The question now is whether the numbers will confirm the soft-landing narrative that's been supporting markets or throw up some warning signs that make traders more cautious heading into earnings season.