NEW YORK — December 15, 2025 — U.S. stock futures are edging higher heading into the final full week of trading in 2025, but the tone remains cautious after last week’s tech-led pullback reignited debate about how much “AI optimism” is already priced into markets. [1]
This week’s big swing factor isn’t earnings season — it’s data. After a historic federal shutdown disrupted the normal flow of U.S. economic reports, investors are preparing for a “catch-up” wave of jobs and inflation releases that could reset expectations for the Federal Reserve’s next move. [2]
Below is what matters most before the opening bell.
1) Futures are slightly higher — but the market is still in “show me” mode
In early premarket trading, Dow futures were up about 0.3%, S&P 500 futures about 0.2%, and Nasdaq-100 futures roughly 0.1% — a modest rebound attempt after Friday’s slide, when tech and AI-linked names dragged. [3]
The backdrop is a market that’s been strong overall in 2025, yet increasingly selective under the surface. The Dow has held up better than the Nasdaq lately, and the rally has broadened beyond a small group of mega-cap tech leaders — a shift many strategists view as healthier, even if it creates short-term turbulence in headline indexes. [4]
What to watch at the open: if bond yields keep easing and the dollar stays soft, it tends to relieve pressure on long-duration growth stocks — including the same tech names that sold off last week. [5]
2) The Fed cut rates — but officials are signaling a pause until clearer data arrives
The Federal Reserve cut rates by 25 basis points on December 10, taking the fed funds target range to 3.50%–3.75%, and the vote was notably divided — with dissents on both sides (some wanted no change, one wanted a larger cut). [6]
That split matters because it helps explain why markets are now hyper-focused on the next batch of official data: policymakers have been operating with less visibility than usual, and “one more cut” isn’t being treated as automatic.
Today’s notable Fed item: Fed Governor Stephen Miran is scheduled to speak this morning, a potential catalyst for rates and equity futures if he leans hawkish (inflation risk) or dovish (labor-market risk). [7]
3) The shutdown aftermath is still driving the biggest “macro” risk this week
The market’s most important question right now is simple: Is the U.S. economy slowing enough to justify more Fed easing — without inflation re-accelerating? The problem is that investors have had to make those calls with gaps in the official record because the shutdown delayed key Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) releases. [8]
BLS has also warned that some items were not produced on the normal schedule — and in some cases can’t be fully reconstructed retroactively. For example, BLS says it will not produce an October 2025 PPI news release, and plans to publish delayed data in later releases; it also notes disruptions around Real Earnings tied to the lapse in appropriations. [9]
Why this matters before the open: traders are treating this week’s numbers as high-impact, but also potentially “noisy.” As the Financial Times notes, even when delayed reports arrive, the results may be incomplete or distorted — meaning markets could react hard initially and then reassess as details emerge. [10]
4) Today’s U.S. calendar: manufacturing + housing sentiment (and why both can move yields)
Even though the biggest data hits later in the week, Monday still has market-moving releases:
- 8:30 a.m. ET — Empire State Manufacturing (Dec.): consensus around 10 versus 18.7 previously, suggesting expectations for slower (but still positive) activity. [11]
- 10:00 a.m. ET — NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (Dec.): release time is 10:00 a.m. ET, with forecasts clustered around 39 versus 38 prior. [12]
Why traders care: both releases can nudge Treasury yields, especially in a market already debating whether longer-term yields are “too high” relative to the Fed’s rate cuts. Some analysts argue elevated long-dated yields are quietly reshaping global capital flows — a theme that can influence U.S. equities through discount rates and sector leadership. [13]
5) The week’s real test: delayed jobs data Tuesday, CPI Thursday
This is the reason investors are hesitant to chase Monday’s early bounce.
Reuters reports that the November jobs report is due Tuesday, followed by CPI on Thursday, creating a rare cluster of high-profile releases coming after weeks of limited official visibility. [14]
Economists’ expectations show how fragile the outlook has become:
- Reuters polling cited in its Week Ahead coverage points to about 35,000 jobs added in November — tepid enough to keep “growth scare” narratives alive. [15]
- Other forecasters (including Barclays, cited by Kiplinger) have warned job growth could be modest and the unemployment rate could drift higher — but emphasize uncertainty because the shutdown complicates interpretation. [16]
On inflation, markets are bracing for a reading that may still show price pressures above the Fed’s target, even as labor conditions soften — exactly the mix that can create volatility across both stocks and bonds. [17]
6) AI “bubble” anxiety is shaping market leadership — and it’s not just a U.S. story
Last week’s sharp moves in AI-linked bellwethers are still echoing worldwide. Broadcom’s margin warning and Oracle’s updated outlook helped reignite questions about the profitability and funding costs of the next leg of AI infrastructure buildouts. [18]
What’s different now is the market’s response: instead of a broad “risk-off” crash, money has been rotating. Barron’s notes improving breadth as investors expand beyond a narrow AI-heavy trade, while Reuters flagged how tech weakness weighed on the S&P 500 late last week. [19]
Overnight, that caution carried into Asia, where markets slipped amid concerns about tech valuations and additional stress signs in China’s property sector. [20]
7) Global cues: central banks, China property, and the yen
Before U.S. cash trading begins, traders are also digesting a heavy global macro backdrop:
- Japan: Reuters reports Japanese business sentiment hit a four-year high, reinforcing expectations that the Bank of Japan could raise rates at its December meeting (widely discussed as a move toward 0.75%). [21]
- Europe: European stocks opened firmer with banks and energy leading, even as the region remains sensitive to the AI valuation debate that hit markets late last week. [22]
- China property: Reuters highlighted renewed worry around developers, including China Vanke’s bond-extension setback — a reminder that China’s property story can still pressure global risk appetite. [23]
- FX markets: The yen strengthened ahead of key central bank decisions, while the dollar stayed near recent lows as traders look to this week’s delayed U.S. data for direction. [24]
8) Commodities and crypto: oil up on geopolitics, gold and silver stay hot, bitcoin rebounds
Cross-asset signals are also flashing:
- Oil: Brent and WTI were higher early Monday as supply-risk headlines (including escalating U.S.–Venezuela tensions) outweighed longer-term surplus concerns. [25]
- Gold and silver: Gold climbed to a more than seven-week high, supported by a softer dollar and lower yields, while silver remained near record territory — both reflecting demand for hedges ahead of key U.S. data. [26]
- Bitcoin: Bitcoin rebounded back above roughly $89,000 after a weekend dip, tracking the broader “risk sentiment vs. rates” tug-of-war. [27]
9) Stock-specific headlines to monitor: SpaceX IPO steps and Tesla robotaxi testing
A few high-profile company stories are feeding into premarket chatter:
- SpaceX: The Wall Street Journal reports SpaceX has begun a formal process to select investment banks for a potential IPO — one of the clearest signals yet that a listing is under serious consideration (timing still uncertain). [28]
- Tesla: Tesla is drawing attention after reports (and Musk’s confirmation) that it has begun testing a driverless Model Y robotaxi in Austin without a human safety monitor inside, a notable milestone for the autonomy narrative that often moves the stock. [29]
Premarket movers (early read): Among notable gainers/laggards listed in early premarket data were Newmont, Akamai, Freeport-McMoRan on the upside and Adobe, Costco, Caesars, Norwegian Cruise Line among decliners — but premarket leaderboards can change quickly as liquidity picks up. [30]
10) Bottom line: Monday’s open may be calm — but the week is built for volatility
Monday’s early tone is constructive, with futures modestly higher. But the market is effectively setting up for a major “information dump” over the next few sessions: delayed labor data, CPI, and other releases landing into a thin year-end tape can amplify price swings. Reuters has specifically flagged the holiday period as one where reduced volume can exaggerate moves, especially if the data surprises. [31]
For investors heading into the opening bell, the key is less about predicting today’s first move — and more about recognizing what’s likely to drive the next move: rates, the credibility of the delayed data, and whether the market’s rotation away from the most crowded AI trades continues. [32]
References
1. www.marketwatch.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. www.marketwatch.com, 4. www.barrons.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.federalreserve.gov, 7. www.marketwatch.com, 8. www.reuters.com, 9. www.bls.gov, 10. www.ft.com, 11. www.marketwatch.com, 12. www.nahb.org, 13. www.investing.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.kiplinger.com, 17. www.barrons.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.barrons.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.reuters.com, 23. www.reuters.com, 24. www.reuters.com, 25. www.reuters.com, 26. www.reuters.com, 27. www.marketwatch.com, 28. www.wsj.com, 29. www.businessinsider.com, 30. www.investing.com, 31. www.reuters.com, 32. www.barrons.com


