U.S. equities pushed into year-end with the S&P 500 closing at a fresh record of 6,909.79, as AI-linked megacaps led in a holiday-thinned tape. The Nasdaq finished at 23,561.84, while futures into Christmas Eve were only fractionally softer, a sign investors are still leaning into the seasonal “Santa Claus rally” window rather than de-risking.
The catalyst was a shutdown-delayed growth surprise that briefly revived the “higher-for-longer” narrative. The Commerce Department’s initial Q3 read showed real GDP up 4.3% versus a 3.2% consensus estimate, a jolt that initially pushed traders to trim early-2026 cut expectations, according to the same session’s market coverage. Markets ultimately shrugged it off, helped by the idea that a strong economy can coexist with lower inflation if productivity is rising.
Rates pricing did soften at the margin. Reuters noted traders still expect two 25-bp cuts by end-2026 but cut the odds of a January move to 13%, down from 18%, a subtle rebalancing rather than a regime shift in expectations, per Christmas Eve futures coverage. Meanwhile, safe-haven demand stayed lively. CNBC reported gold futures touched an intraday record of $4,530.80/oz, underscoring that not everyone is fully comfortable with risk-on exuberance, per the metals update.
Next, watch whether breadth can improve beyond the same AI and mega-cap complex. If the rally widens while rates expectations stay anchored, it supports a cleaner risk-on setup into early January. Position for thinner liquidity and bigger-than-usual moves on small catalysts during the shortened holiday sessions.