Sat, Dec 27, 2025
US stocks drifted lower on Friday in thin post-Christmas trading, the S&P 500 slipping 0.03% on well below the usual volume. The index is on track to end the year up 18%, buoyed by deregulation hopes and enthusiasm for AI. But beneath the surface, investors are voting with their feet: active equity mutual funds saw roughly $1 trillion in outflows, the 11th consecutive year of withdrawals and the deepest of the cycle.
Where is the money going? Into commodities. Gold and silver hit fresh records on Friday, with silver surging nearly 8% as amateur investors pile into the trade. Both metals are posting their best annual performance since 1979.
In trade, Mexico has emerged as the unexpected winner of Trump's tariff regime, its exports to the US surging even as duties were designed to punish it. And in the Gulf, old alliances are fraying: Saudi Arabia struck a UAE-backed faction in Yemen on Friday, a sign that American allies are settling their own scores.
The AI buildout that powered this year's rally is straining at the seams. Tech giants have shifted $120 billion in data-center debt off their balance sheets, binding Wall Street to a bet that may or may not pay off. So desperate is the hunger for power that data centers are now turning to aircraft engines—jet turbines bolted onto trailers—to bypass grid connection delays.
Oil fell nearly 3% on Friday. The dollar capped its worst week since June. A winter storm cancelled over 1,000 flights across the Northeast. Dealmaking finished the year near $4.5 trillion, the second-best on record. The year is ending quietly, but 2026 will have questions to answer.