S&P 500 Reaches New Record High In First Trading Week Of 2026
As expected, the first full trading week of January 2026 was an exciting one for the S&P 500 (Index: SPX), which closed out the week at 6,966.28, a new record high and 1.6% higher than it ended the previous trading week.
Although we anticipated the week would be a good one for oil and gas industry stocks because the U.S.' successful extraction of Venezuela's dictator from power during the preceding weekend, there were two other big news events to push stock prices higher across the board during the week that was.
The first of those additional headlines that moved the markets originated at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Tuesday, 6 January 2025. Nelson Huang, the CEO of Nvidia (Nasdaq: NVDA) announced the company was in full production of its next generation AI-industry leading computer chips and that data storage was becoming a constraint on the sector's growth, which prompted the stocks of hard drive and memory storage to surge.
The second additional headline came on Friday, 9 January 2025 with the release of the December 2025 employment situation report. At first glance, it contained the bad news that 2025 closed out with anemic job growth. But here, this bad news increased the likelihood the Fed will cut the Federal Funds Rate in 2026 after a pause, which benefits the companies that will be borrowing big to support their investments in AI technologies. The CME Group's FedWatch Tool projects the Fed will hold the Federal Funds Rate steady until 17 June (2026-Q2), when it anticipates a quarter point rate cut. The tool forecasts another quarter point reduction on 16 September (2026-Q3).
Investor attention however appears to remain focused on the current quarter of 2026-Q1, given the potential the Fed will announce its next rate sometime during the quarter. The latest update finds the trajectory of the S&P 500 falling within the middle of the chart's redzone forecast range, which assumes investors would be focused on 2026-Q1 while it runs.
There was a lot of new information investors had to absorb during the trading week ending on Friday, 9 January 2026. Here are the week's market-moving headlines:
Monday, 5 January 2026
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Fed minions think inflation may drop to 2% in 2026, below the 3% they've been targeting in last three years. Also starting to think tariffs reduce inflation rather than increase it:
- Bigger trouble developing in China:
- BOJ minions say they're not done turning the screws on Japan's interest rates:
- Dow logged a record close as Wall Street rallied on U.S. action in Venezuela
Tuesday, 6 January 2026
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Fed minions talk about potential 2026 rate cuts:
- BOJ minions pressured to target 2% annual inflation:
- ECB minions get better economic data for Eurozone:
- S&P 500 notches fresh all-time high with 7,000 now in sight
Wednesday, 7 January 2026
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- US will ban Wall Street investors from buying single-family homes, Trump says
- US job openings slide to 14-month low; hiring weak in November
- US bank profits to surge on investment banking jump in fourth quarter
- US service sector activity picks up in December, employment rebounds
- Oil falls, stocks mixed after Trump reveals plan for Venezuelan oil
- Trump targets defense contractor pay, buybacks and dividends
- Bigger trouble, stimulus developing in China:
- Eurozone economy described as "benign":
- Wall Street ended mostly lower as investors weigh latest labor data
Thursday, 8 January 2026
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Oil settles up 3% on Venezuela news, supply worries in Russia, Iraq and Iran
- BEA says it will use US September, November CPI averages to calculate October PCE inflation
- US October trade deficit lowest since 2009 as imports decline
- US third-quarter productivity rises at fastest pace in two years
- Trump orders his 'Representatives' to buy $200 billion in mortgage bonds
- Fed minions expected to cut U.S. interest rates a little during 2026, one minions wants to see bigger drop in rates:
- Bigger trouble developing in China:
- Bigger trouble, wage inflation developing in Japan:
- U.S. stocks end mixed as investors assess labor data, defense trade
Friday, 9 January 2026
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Fed minions still not expected to cut rates in January 2026, see housing affordability as a supply problem, are still fighting Bidenflation, no comment on jobless rate coming in lower than they expected:
- Bigger trouble, stimulus developing in China:
- S&P 500, Dow set all-time closing highs after jobs report, no SCOTUS ruling on tariffs
The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow toolestimates real GDP growth in the U.S. during 2025-Q4 jumped to +5.1% from the +3.0% growth it anticipated a week earlier.
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