12 Dec 2025-Market News Today-Wall Street Hits Records as Dollar Slides

Global stocks hover near record highs after Fed rate cut

Global stock markets are near record highs after the Federal Reserve’s latest rate cut. The Dow and S&P 500 have hit new peaks, European markets are slightly higher, and most Asian markets are up. The dollar is at multi-week lows, oil is trading around $60, gold is close to record levels, and market volatility remains low.

Today’s Snapshot

  • S&P 500 (11 Dec close): 6,901.00 (+0.2% d/d; +17% YTD)
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average (11 Dec close): ~48,700 (+1.3% d/d; ~+14% YTD)
  • Nasdaq Composite (11 Dec close): –0.3% d/d; ~+22% YTD
  • STOXX Europe 600 (11 Dec close): ~581 (+0.5% d/d; near record)
  • FTSE 100 (11 Dec close): 9,703 (+0.5% d/d; near record)
  • Nikkei 225 (12 Dec intraday): ~50,600 (slightly softer; near record)
  • MSCI Asia-Pac ex-Japan (12 Dec intraday): modestly lower; >20% YTD
  • Brent crude (12 Dec intraday): ~USD 61–62/bbl
  • WTI crude (12 Dec intraday): ~USD 58/bbl
  • Spot gold (12 Dec intraday): ~USD 4,275/oz (near record)
  • Silver (recent): ~ USD 60 per ounce, slightly below record highs
  • U.S. Dollar Index (DXY): ~98.6 (two-month low area)
  • EUR/USD: ~1.17
  • USD/JPY: mid-155s
  • CBOE VIX (11 Dec close): ~14.9 (low and subdued)

Global Markets

United States

U.S. equities extended their gains after the Federal Reserve’s rate cut boosted confidence across most sectors.

  • S&P 500: 6,901 (+0.2%) — closed at a new record high.
  • Dow Jones: +1.3% — reached another all-time high as money moved into value stocks.
  • Nasdaq: –0.3% — slightly lower on the day.

What Drove the Moves

  • S&P 500 & Dow up: Investors shifted their money into banks, metal companies, and other steady businesses because lower interest rates make it cheaper for these companies to borrow and grow.
  • Nasdaq down: Tech stocks slipped because Oracle’s share price dropped a lot. The company gave a weaker forecast and said it would spend heavily on AI, which made investors worry that its profits might not grow fast enough. This pulled down the rest of the tech sector.

Federal Reserve Impact:

  • The Fed cut interest rates by 25 points and sounded calm about the economy, which made investors feel more confident and lifted sectors that do well when conditions improve.
Europe

European stocks moved higher, taking their cue from Wall Street’s strength and the recent Fed rate cut.

  • STOXX 600: closed near 581 (+0.5%), supported by financials and industrial stocks.
  • Tech sector: slipped as investors grew cautious about rising AI-related spending.
  • FTSE 100: gained 0.5% to around 9,703, staying close to record levels.
  • Overall sentiment: the weaker dollar and the Fed’s supportive tone helped lift confidence across European markets.zx`
Asia

Asian markets were mostly steady, taking direction from Wall Street’s strong finish and a weaker U.S. dollar.

  • Nikkei 225: Stayed just above 50,500. It dipped slightly but remained close to record highs after a strong year.
  • Nifty 50/IDX/SET: opened higher because investors felt more confident after U.S. markets hit new record levels.
  • Hang Seng Index & Shanghai Stock Exchange: traded mixed with no clear direction because ongoing problems in the property market made investors less willing to buy.

Asset-class highlights

FX
  • Dollar (DXY): ~ 98.8 because the Fed cut rates and recent U.S. data showed the economy is slowing a bit.
  • EUR/USD: pushed higher toward 1.17 as the weaker dollar helped the euro gain strength.
  • USD/JPY: stayed in the mid-150s, with only a mild move in the yen.
FX

DXY sits around 98.7, down about 0.6% after the Fed cut. The weaker dollar is supporting commodities.

EUR/USD is trading close to 1.17, near a multi-week high.

USD/JPY remains around the mid-150s as traders weigh BOJ hike odds and the impact of the recent earthquake in Japan.

Overall, FX markets show a “soft-dollar, cautious-risk-on” mood after the Fed news.

Commodities

Oil

  • Brent crude: ~ USD 60–62 per barrel.
  • WTI crude: ~ USD 58 per barrel.

Both Brent and WTI moved because of tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela, supply risks from the Russia–Ukraine war, and new International Energy Agency (IEA) forecasts suggesting there may be more oil supply than demand in FY26.

Precious Metals

  • Gold: Gold is near $4,250–4,300/oz because a weaker dollar and expectations of easier U.S. policy are supporting demand.
  • Silver: Silver is trading near $60 because many buyers are still entering the market after it moved above $59, keeping prices strong.

Volatility & positioning

The CBOE (Chicago Board Options Exchange) VIX index is around 14.9, which is still very low even after a week full of Fed news and U.S. data releases.

What traders are watching

  1. Fed outlook: After cutting rates three times this year, investors are waiting to see how long the Fed pauses and what FY26 may look like.
  2. U.S. data: Upcoming jobs, inflation, and spending numbers will show whether the economy is slowing more than expected.
  3. Dollar moves: A weaker dollar helps commodities and emerging markets, while a rebound could tighten global conditions.
  4. Tech earnings & AI spending: Oracle’s drop raised questions about whether heavy AI investment will deliver profits and how other big tech firms may guide ahead.
  5. Oil & geopolitics: The Russia–Ukraine war and U.S. sanctions on Russian and Venezuelan oil continue to influence energy prices.

Market Quote of the Day

“In the short run, the market is a voting machine; in the long run, it is a weighing machine.” – Benjamin Graham

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