U.S. financial markets ended the first full trading week of
2026 on a broadly positive note, with major equity benchmarks reaching all-time
highs. Robust investor participation defied typical early-year caution. The
overarching narrative was renewed confidence in a soft-landing scenario rather
than a flight to safety, as evidenced by the rotation out of defensive mutual
fund structures and into large-cap growth ETFs.
Here are the key takeaways from last week:
Stock Index Performance
- The S&P 500 increased 1.57%.
- The Nasdaq 100 gained 2.22%.
- The Dow Jones Industrial Average led, rising 2.32%.
Economic Data & Market Drivers
- President Trump's military operation capturing Nicol•s
Maduro dominated headlines. U.S. equities barely
reacted, as investors judged the conflict to be geographically
contained. Energy and credit markets tied to Venezuelan production saw
more direct impact, while WTI crude stayed subdued in the mid-$50s as
OPEC+ discipline and soft global demand offset supply concerns.
- December payrolls rose just 50,000, well
below consensus and recent averages, while prior months were revised lower
and unemployment edged down to 4.4% on falling participation. The shift
from •hot• to •cooling• eases inflation pressure but raises growth
concerns, complicating the Federal Reserve•s calculus as services activity
remains firm.
- The ISM Services Purchasing Managers• Index (PMI) hit
54.4, its strongest 2025 reading, with business activity and new orders
solidly expansionary. Yet the ISM Prices Index (an early warning system
for inflation) stayed elevated. Additionally, consumer sentiment ticked higher
but remains depressed, with inflation expectations sticky in the low-4%
range • challenging Fed re-anchoring efforts towards its 2% target.
- The 2-year yield rose 6 basis points to 3.539%, snapping a
four-week decline as markets tempered near-term easing bets. The 10-year
closed at 4.170%
amid competing forces: slower growth supporting duration versus
geopolitical risk and policy uncertainty pushing yields higher.
The Week Ahead
- Over the weekend, news broke of an investigation into
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. Gold futures rose and stock market
futures fell
on the news. As always, we will be paying close attention to market
developments.
- December's Consumer Price Index (CPI) on January 13th will
test whether disinflation is durable after core inflation fell to 2.6% in
November • its lowest since early 2021. The Producer Price Index (PPI) and
retail sales on January 14th, followed by industrial production on January
16th, will confirm whether softer labor data are cooling demand. Fed
speakers are expected to signal whether December's weak jobs report
warrants earlier rate cuts or reinforces a •higher for longer• stance.
- Q4 earnings season begins with major banks testing whether
market gains justify analyst expectations for 15% S&P 500 earnings
growth in 2026. Bank commentary on credit quality and margins will reveal
how higher rates are affecting the economy. Supportive CPI and earnings
favor quality cyclicals; surprises could trigger volatility and rotation
toward defensive sectors.
The first full week of 2026 confirmed an economy with
slowing job gains and upbeat services activity, keeping the Fed data-dependent
rather than poised for aggressive cuts. For investors, this argues for staying
invested but balanced • emphasizing quality, maintaining diversification, and
preparing for volatility as inflation data and earnings unfold.
As always, feel free to reach out to us anytime with
questions.