Monday, January 5, 2026

Stock Index Futures Climb in Strong Start to 2026

March S&P 500 E-Mini futures (ESH26) are up +0.63%, and March Nasdaq 100 E-Mini futures (NQH26) are up +1.08% this morning, pointing to a strong start on Wall Street in the first trading session of 2026.

Futures on the Nasdaq 100 outperformed amid renewed optimism around AI following a wave of AI-related news from Asia. Chip designer Shanghai Biren Technology Co. jumped in its Hong Kong trading debut. Also, Baidu climbed in Hong Kong after its AI chip unit confidentially filed for an IPO. In addition, DeepSeek released a paper outlining a more efficient method for developing AI.

Also supporting the positive sentiment was some relief on the trade front after Washington postponed tariff hikes on upholstered furniture, kitchen cabinets, and vanities, and cut proposed duties on Italian pasta.

In Wednesday’s trading session, Wall Street’s three main equity benchmarks ended in the red. Chip stocks fell, with Micron Technology (MU) and KLA Corp. (KLAC) sliding over -2%. Also, the Magnificent Seven stocks lost ground, with Tesla (TSLA) falling more than -1% and Meta Platforms (META) dropping about -0.9%. In addition, GlobalFoundries (GFS) slipped over -3% after Wedbush downgraded the stock to Neutral from Outperform. On the bullish side, Nike (NKE) rose more than +4% and was the top percentage gainer on the S&P 500 and Dow after a regulatory filing showed that CEO Elliott Hill bought nearly $1 million worth of the footwear maker’s shares on Monday.

The Labor Department’s report on Wednesday showed that the number of Americans filing for initial jobless claims in the past week fell by -16K to a 1-month low of 199K, compared with the 219K expected.

The benchmark S&P 500 and tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 indexes finished 2025 up about +16.4% and +20.2%, respectively, marking double-digit gains for a third straight year—their longest winning streak since 2021.

“Describing 2025 as ‘resilient’ might be an understatement. The economy showed remarkable strength by overcoming higher inflation, a slowing labor market, fewer rate cuts than originally expected, and a sharp rise in the effective tariff rate. Despite these challenges, growth remained steady without slipping into recession,” said Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist for LPL Financial.

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