Daily market snapshot

Published December 9, 2025
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Tuesday, 12/9/2025 p.m.

  • Stocks little changed ahead of Fed meeting – U.S. equity markets closed near the flatline on Tuesday as investors await the conclusion of the final FOMC meeting of the year tomorrow. Market expectations call for the Fed to deliver a 0.25% interest-rate cut at tomorrow’s meeting*, with much of investors’ attention likely focused on updated Fed economic projections and commentary regarding the appropriate path of monetary policy over the coming year. On the economic front, the NFIB Small Business Index edged higher in November to 99, slightly above expectations for a reading of 98.3.* Additionally, job openings for October were higher than expected, holding steady near 7.7 million and signaling steady labor demand, in our view.* Bond yields closed slightly higher, with the 10-year Treasury yield finishing around 4.18%.*
     
  • Small-business optimism improves in November – The NFIB Small Business Index rose to 99 in November, a modest improvement from the prior month and slightly above the 30-year average of 98.* Encouragingly, the percentage of small businesses planning to increase employment climbed to 19% for the month—a four-point increase from October and the highest level since December 2024.* This strong employment reading points to underlying stability in the labor market, in our view, and contrasts with the ADP employment report for November, which showed small businesses shedding over 100,000 jobs.* Additionally, the percentage of small businesses expecting inflation-adjusted sales to rise over the next three months increased to 15%, the highest since January.* We expect labor-market conditions to remain stable despite slowing job growth, which should help support healthy economic activity over the coming year, with real GDP growth settling around 2% in 2026, in our view.*
     
  • Dollar weakness has bolstered international stocks in 2025 – The DXY U.S. Dollar Index has come under pressure in 2025 and is on pace to decline by nearly 9% for the year—its worst performance since 2017.* Political and fiscal uncertainty, combined with a narrowing yield advantage versus other developed markets, has contributed to the dollar’s decline, in our view. For investors, the weaker U.S. dollar has boosted international returns, with the MSCI AC World ex U.S. Index up more than 30% in U.S. dollar terms but only 23% in local currency terms.* We expect currency to play a less significant role in international returns over the coming year. However, we do see potential for a flat to weaker dollar, particularly as the European Central Bank appears to be at the end of its easing cycle while the Bank of Japan is expected to continue raising rates*. This could further erode the U.S. yield advantage and put downward pressure on the dollar, in our view, helping to reinforce the case for maintaining a globally diversified portfolio.*

Brock Weimer, CFA;
Investment Strategy

Source: *FactSet

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