What matters in U.S. and global markets today

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Morning Bid U.S.

Morning Bid U.S.

A Reuters Open Interest newsletter

What matters in U.S. and global markets today

 

By Mike Dolan, Editor-At-Large, Financial Industry and Financial Markets, Reuters Open Interest 

Last month showed that 'buy the dip' stock market behavior is alive and well, but Wall Street has yet to regain early November peaks and tariff angst is proving hard to shake.

The final month of the year is off to a bumpy start. U.S. manufacturers registered an ongoing contraction of activity as input price growth turned higher again from already elevated levels, with tariffs widely blamed.

I'll get into all the market-moving news below.

In today's column, I take a look at the mostly bullish market calls for 2026 and explore a peculiar phenomenon at the heart of many of them. 

Also, check out the latest episode of the new Morning Bid daily podcast. Subscribe to hear Reuters journalists discuss the biggest news in markets and finance seven days a week.

I’d love to hear from you, so please reach out to me at mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com. 

 
 

Data refreshes every time you open this email. For more U.S. market news, click here. Please send any feedback to morningbid@thomsonreuters.com.

 

Today's Market Minute

  • No matter how Donald Trump’s latest push to end the war in Ukraine pans out, Europe fears the prospect of a deal that would not punish or weaken Russia sufficiently, placing the continent’s security in greater jeopardy.
  • "The Big Short" investor Michael Burry took aim at electric automaker Tesla in a blog post, saying the Elon Musk-led company is "ridiculously overvalued". 
  • Warner Bros Discovery has received a second round of bids, including a mostly cash offer from Netflix, in an auction that could conclude in the coming days or weeks, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters on Monday.
  • Changes OPEC+ is making to its oil production quota system will likely spark a wave of upstream investments among members, diminishing concerns about long-term supply shortages, writes ROI Energy Columnist Ron Bousso. 
  • Recent U.S. electric vehicle sales data has sparked concerns about a U-turn in American clean car momentum, writes ROI Global Energy Transition Columnist Gavin Maguire.
 

Bumpier December

ISM's November factory readout was enough to lift Treasury yields sharply across the curve on Monday and sowed a kernel of doubt about this month's widely expected Federal Reserve interest rate cut. A third Fed cut of the year on December 10 had been almost fully priced prior to the report, but the chances of a move have been pared back slightly to just over 80%.

Fed policymakers are in their traditional quiet period ahead of the meeting, so no more public guidance is expected before then. But the ISM report re-introduced the tariff question.

With the Supreme Court yet to rule on the legality of President Donald Trump's use of emergency powers to introduce the levies, retailers too were emphasizing the pressure.

Costco became the latest firm to sue the U.S. government to ensure it will receive refunds if the Supreme Court rejects Trump's sweeping authority to impose those tariffs.

The discomfort spread to stock and bond markets on Monday, with the S&P 500 falling back about 0.5% - irked additionally by the ongoing shakeout in crypto markets. Bitcoin lost more than 5% on Monday, relapsing back below $90,000 before steadying earlier today, and crypto stocks were hit too.

Firmer crude oil prices also weighed after the weekend decision from OPEC+ to keep output levels unchanged early next year.

But with Tuesday's calendar thin, world markets have calmed somewhat before today's bell. 

U.S. stock index futures crept back higher, with European stocks higher too. South Korea's Kospi benchmark outperformed again with gains of almost 2%.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on Monday confirmed the general tariff rate on imports from South Korea, including on autos, would drop to 15% from last month because South Korea has introduced legislation in parliament to implement the country's strategic U.S. investment commitments.

Japan's Nikkei also held the line after a heavy loss there on Monday on stepped up speculation about a Bank of Japan interest rate rise this month. Japanese government bond yields and the yen eased back a bit after a decent 10-year debt auction there.

There was better news from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, which lifted its U.S. economic growth forecasts for this year and next to 2.0% and 1.7% respectively. It also nudged up euro zone forecasts, but said global trade growth would almost halve to 2.3% in 2026 due to tariffs.

Euro zone inflation for November, meantime, came in a touch above expectations at 2.2%

In Britain, the Bank of England cut the amount of capital it estimates lenders need to hold in a bid to boost lending and stimulate the economy, in what will be its first reduction to bank capital demands since the global financial crisis. The major UK bank stocks rose about 1%. 

 

2026 market calls already laced with 'Buy, but...'

As consensus forms around next year's investment outlook, it's hard to find many outright stock market bears. Yet an economic mix not seen for more than half a century means few forecasts come without serious qualifiers.

The biggest puzzle of 2025 is transpiring to be less about how markets shrugged off U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff war and more about how the artificial intelligence investment boom has managed to accelerate without creating many jobs.

As economists at JPMorgan insist, the juxtaposition of an AI-led capex explosion and stalling labor market has not been evident in any U.S. expansion for the past 60 years.   

 

Graphics are produced by Reuters.

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