Source: Stockcharts.com
🔭 This Week- What Matters for Markets
This week marks the final heavy stretch of economic data for 2025, with a strong focus on labor, growth, and inflation trends as markets close out the year. An important release will be the delayed November jobs report, with investors looking for continued, modest job growth that supports a soft-landing narrative without reigniting inflation concerns.
Beyond employment data, November Retail Sales and December flash PMI (Purchasing Managers’ Index) will offer updated insight into consumer spending and business activity. Stability remains the key expectation, as any sharp deterioration could challenge the Fed’s pause stance and unsettle the markets.
Inflation will also be in focus with the release of CPI (Consumer Price index) and Core PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditures). Chair Powell recently downplayed tariff-driven inflation risks, and markets will be looking for confirmation that price pressures remain contained. Absent negative surprises, the data could help support a continued grind higher into year-end, particularly for non-tech sectors.
🌐 Broad Overview
Markets are entering the final weeks of the year, navigating a more complex backdrop. Confidence in economic resilience seemingly remains intact, supported by recently stronger employment data, steady consumer demand, and easing inflation pressures. However, the sources of market leadership are evolving.
AI-driven growth has sustained meaningful damage as investors increasingly question whether massive capital expenditures will translate into acceptable returns. While technology remains a critical long-term driver, the tailwinds that propelled outsized outperformance in 2024 and 2025 have moderated. Meanwhile, expectations for additional Fed rate cuts have diminished, removing another layer of stimulus that markets had leaned on.
The bond market continues to signal gradual cooling rather than recession, and the dollar’s neutral range suggests limited currency-driven disruption ahead. As 2026 approaches, the strongest case in years is emerging for broader participation from the “rest of the market,” including value, small-caps, and non-tech sectors.
We’ll continue to monitor these evolving dynamics closely. If you have any questions about your portfolio or the markets, please contact your CIAS Investment Adviser Representative.