December served as a fitting
finale to a year that defied expectations, anchored by a classic late-cycle
mix: moderating price pressures, a supportive Federal Reserve, and resilient
equity markets. This backdrop allowed investors to traverse another rate cut
without shaking the prevailing •soft-landing• consensus for 2026.
Leadership shifted noticeably as
the year drew to a close. Beyond the •Magnificent 7• and AI-centric stocks, a
broader array of companies climbed higher in December. This expansion beyond
mega-cap tech suggests a healthier, more balanced market environment as we
enter the new year.
Let•s dive into December•s
performance, the trends that shaped the month, and the key catalysts we're
watching as we head into 2026.
Major U.S. Stock Indices
Market averages diverged
significantly throughout December. The S&P 500 ended nearly unchanged after
a strong annual run, while the Nasdaq 100 surrendered ground to profit-taking
despite leading for most of the year on AI and semiconductor strength. The Dow
outperformed, rising as year-end capital flowed toward more defensive
industrial names.
Fed Policy, Minutes, and Dots
- The December 10th Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC) meeting delivered
a third consecutive 25-basis-point cut, lowering the funds target to
3.50%•3.75%. Policymakers called growth "moderate," job gains
"slowed," and inflation •somewhat elevated,• pivoting from
inflation concerns toward a more balanced worry about labor market
weakness.
- The Summary of Economic
Projections telegraphed
a shallow easing cycle. Officials penciled in just two more cuts through
2027, with rates bottoming in the low-3% range, far from the pre-pandemic
zero-rate era. Growth forecasts hovered near sub-trend, and core inflation
drifted toward 2%, reinforcing a long glide path rather than a hard
landing.
- Minutes released December 29th revealed
a contentious 9•3 vote, the most dissents since 2019. Some officials
argued cuts risked reigniting inflation; others warned that holding steady
could hurt employment. The decision, officials said, was "finely
balanced," with debate centering on whether disinflation had proven
durable enough to justify further easing.
Inflation Cools Further
- The November Consumer Price
Index (CPI) report showed headline inflation at 2.7% year-over-year,
undershooting estimates and hitting the lowest rate since mid-year. Core
CPI climbed 2.6%, with shelter up 3.0%, medical care 2.9%, and household
furnishings 4.6% • evidence of cooling but still-sticky core services.
Monthly gains of 0.3% for headline and 0.2% for core both came in below
consensus.
- Shelter inflation ran at 3.6%
annually while gasoline jumped 4.1% month-over-month, yet the overall
picture supported a
good disinflation narrative: energy's bounce was more than offset by
moderating momentum in shelter and core services.
Hiring Loses Steam
- The unemployment rate rose to
4.6% in November, up from 4.4%. This prompted the Fed to recast
the labor market as having •moved toward better balance• with downside
employment risks now front and center. Analysts described a low-hiring,
low-firing regime: openings have normalized, but layoffs remain
historically subdued.
- November payrolls rose just
64,000 • well below the 2025 monthly average and further indication of a
cooling labor market. Healthcare and construction added workers, but
transportation, warehousing, and consumer-facing sectors shed jobs.
Services Strong, Manufacturing
Weak
- Services are still driving
growth. The ISM Services Purchasing
Managers• Index (PMI) held at 52.6 in November, its ninth consecutive
expansionary print, with business activity at 54.5 and new orders at 52.9.
But cracks emerged: the employment index stayed below 50 at 48.9,
signaling slower hiring in the services sector.
- Manufacturing told a darker
story. The ISM factory gauge slid to 48.2, its lowest reading in four
months and the latest sign of ongoing contraction. Purchasing managers
cited weak export demand and inventory destocking, a goods recession
running alongside resilient services.
The Path Forward
As 2026 begins, the consensus among major strategists is for a
soft landing, underpinned by modest growth, inflation drifting closer to 2%,
and a measured pace of Fed cuts. For diversified, long‑term investors,
the key strategies are unchanged: staying invested, maintaining balance between
growth and quality income, and using any periods of volatility as opportunities
rather than reasons to abandon the plan.
As always, we're here if you have
any questions or concerns for the new year. Give us a call anytime.