Daily market snapshot

Published December 15, 2025
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Monday, 12/15/2025 p.m.

  • Stocks stumble – Following a bright start, we saw major equity indexes sell off over the course of Monday, adding to the declines seen at the end of last week*. In the large-cap space, weakness was concentrated in some large technology names, with further declines in Oracle and Broadcom adding to those seen after last week's third-quarter earnings reports*. These dynamics weighed on the technology-sensitive Nasdaq index, which fell 0.6% over the day and is now down 2.2% over December so far*. Small-cap stocks, which have generally outperformed in recent weeks, also struggled, with the Russell 2000 index down 0.7%*. Still, this benchmark remains up 1.3% month-to-date, benefiting from a rotation away from large-cap technology stocks*. Shorter-dated government bonds rallied, with the yield on the 2-year U.S. Treasury note down 2 basis points (0.02%), although 10-year yields were flat and remain close to the middle of the 4%-4.5% range seen through much of 2025*. Gold was a touch higher, with prices approaching the record highs seen in October, while oil continues to drift lower, with WTI trading at $57 per barrel, a 2025 low*.
     
  • More data at last – This week will bring some long-awaited economic data after a record-breaking government shutdown of the major statistics agencies. The BLS will release the delayed October and November nonfarm payrolls report and October retail-sales data tomorrow, and the November CPI report on Wednesday (October inflation data will not be released). We need to treat these reports with a touch of caution, in our view, with the quality of these data likely lower than normal due to missed data collection and sampling. Still, following a prolonged data blackout, we think these indicators should help provide some sense of how the economy has been faring in recent months. Economists expect the labor data to show sluggish hiring trends, with the consensus looking for a 50,000 gain in November payrolls, but critically few signs of distress*.
     
  • Dollar drifting lower toward the end of the year – The U.S. dollar has had a difficult year. Following a prolonged bull run which pushed the currency to multi-decade highs, we have seen a correction in the greenback*. This has pushed the dollar down 9.4% against a trade-weighted basket of international currencies, and the dollar has been drifting lower through December*. We think that part of the U.S. dollar success story in recent years has related to a perceived U.S. exceptionalism, with higher growth, interest rates and equity returns compared to other parts of the world all helping create demand for dollar-denominated assets. Aspects of this story appear to have moderated in 2025, with U.S. growth slowing, the Fed cutting interest rates, and some international markets delivering robust returns. In part, we think the performance of the dollar in 2026 will depend on how many more interest-rate cuts we might see from the Fed. We think there is scope for one or two more moves, broadly in line with market pricing*, but a more aggressive easing could add to dollar downside, in our view. 
     

James McCann;
Investment Strategy

Sources: *Bloomberg

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