Week (December 1–5) in Review: Financial Markets

Key Points

Overview

The first week of December opened with cautious risk‑on sentiment as markets balanced resilient, but gradually cooling, macro data against rising conviction that the Federal Reserve will deliver another rate cut at next week’s meeting.

Equity indices in the US and Europe hovered near record or cycle highs, but price action was increasingly rotational: some mega‑cap tech names and AI‑adjacent software stocks advanced, while others lagged under renewed pressure from higher long‑term yields. The VIX volatility index drifted in the mid‑teens, underscoring that, for now, investors see recent swings as noise rather than the start of a regime shift.

Across asset classes, the dominant narrative was about policy expectations and position clean‑up rather than new macro shocks. Labour data and survey‑based indicators continued to show a slowing, but not collapsing, US economy, giving the Fed room to cut while also generating debate about how aggressively it should move. That tension played out in bonds (higher yields), FX (softer dollar) and in the renewed volatility across crypto and high‑beta growth names.

Equities: Near Highs, Narrower Leadership

Major US indices

Trading in the major US benchmarks reflected indecisive, event‑driven positioning rather than a strong directional trend.

Beneath the surface, there was a clear rotation inside large‑cap growth rather than a simple “tech up / tech down” story.

Mega‑cap and sector highlights

Overall, the week reinforced a key late‑2025 theme: index‑level moves are modest, but stock‑ and sector‑level dispersion is large, rewarding investors focused on fundamentals, earnings quality and balance‑sheet strength rather than pure beta.

Fixed Income and Central Banks: Yields Back Up Into the Fed

The most notable cross‑asset move of the week occurred in government bonds.

The net effect for global portfolios: duration risk is back on the radar, and this week served as a reminder that even in a “soft landing” narrative, yield curves can be volatile as central banks navigate the last mile of inflation.

Currencies: Dollar Under Pressure, Euro and Yen Firm

FX markets this week were a clean expression of shifting policy expectations.

However, with the pair approaching a heavy technical zone, traders are increasingly sensitive to any upside surprises in US data or hawkish Fed rhetoric.

Overall, FX participants are beginning to rotate away from a pure “short yen / long dollar” paradigm and toward a more nuanced, data‑dependent view where rate differentials can narrow from both sides.

Commodities: Silver Shines, Gold Steady, Energy Mixed

Precious metals

Energy

Digital Assets: Bitcoin’s Flash Drop and Balance‑Sheet Stress Tests

Bitcoin and major crypto

Bitcoin’s price action this week captured the tug‑of‑war between macro optimism and micro positioning stress.

Later in the week, Bitcoin recovered to trade back above 90k, leaving it modestly higher on the year but well below its October peak around 125–126k. Market participants are now focused on ETF flows, exchange reserve trends and liquidity conditions to determine whether this is a pause before another leg higher or the start of a deeper consolidation phase.

MicroStrategy / “Strategy” (MSTR)

A key corporate storyline was MicroStrategy’s evolving response to Bitcoin volatility.

Management also cut its 2025 earnings and price assumptions, acknowledging that its earlier guidance, which assumed a year‑end Bitcoin price around 150k, is no longer realistic given the recent drawdown and volatility. The company has indicated that selling Bitcoin would be a last resort, only if its market‑value‑to‑Bitcoin‑holdings ratio (mNAV) fell below 1.

For investors, this marks an important transition from a pure “levered Bitcoin proxy” to a more nuanced, risk‑managed vehicle, where capital structure, liquidity buffers and policy discipline matter as much as headline BTC exposure.

Macro Data and Policy Watch: Cooling Labour, Sticky Inflation

This week’s macro dataflow did not deliver new blockbuster surprises, but it solidified the narrative of a cooling, not collapsing, US economy:

This mix — low layoffs but slower re‑hiring — is classic “late‑cycle softening,” consistent with the Fed’s dual‑mandate calculus tilting toward a modest easing bias.

Markets are thus heading into the Fed and global central‑bank week with a finely balanced view: the base case is a cut plus dovish language, but with enough uncertainty around inflation and labour dynamics to keep the possibility of a more cautious Fed very much alive.

Market Outlook: What Matters for Traders and Investors Now

Heading into the second week of December, several themes stand out for professional traders, investors and economists:

  1. Rate‑cut timing vs. magnitude. The December cut is now heavily priced, but how strongly the Fed signals its 2026 path will matter more for curves, growth stocks and credit spreads than the single decision itself.
  2. Earnings quality and balance‑sheet strength. This week’s moves in Salesforce, Dollar General, Meta and MicroStrategy underscored that margin discipline, capital‑allocation pivots and liquidity buffers are being rewarded or punished much more than simple revenue beats.
  3. Cross‑asset correlation shifts. With yields backing up and the dollar softening, the traditional “stocks up, dollar up” regime has given way to a more nuanced environment where FX, rates and equities each respond to slightly different slices of the data, creating opportunities for relative‑value trades.
  4. Positioning‑driven volatility in crypto and high beta. Bitcoin’s sharp intraday drop, despite broadly supportive macro conditions, is a reminder that leverage and structural positioning can drive large, fast moves that then echo into related equities and credit.
  5. Metals as a barometer of both macro and micro trends. Silver’s surge toward record levels and the resilience of gold suggest investors are actively hedging both inflation and policy‑error risks, even as they maintain equity exposure.

In short, the first week of December did not change the macro story, but it sharpened the contours. Growth is slowing but not stalling, inflation is receding but not yet vanquished, central banks are pivoting but remain divided, and markets sit near highs with increasingly selective leadership. For sophisticated market participants, that combination argues for nuanced risk‑taking, active rotation and a close eye on policy communication in the weeks ahead.

Disclaimers and Limitations

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