US equities began the final trading week of 2025 near record highs but encountered challenges amidst low volumes. This week is shorter due to a holiday closure, with the Federal Reserve Meeting Minutes set for release on Tuesday as the key event on the data docket. Major indexes, including the Standard and Poor’s 500, remain flat as the AI tech rally weakens and the home building materials segment declines. The Dow Jones experienced minor gains, tempered by a 1.7% drop in Nvidia shares.
Year End Analysis of US Equities
Despite low year-end volumes, the Dow Jones is on track to maintain either a bullish or stable trend for eight months. The Dow has increased over 14% year-to-date, while the SP500 approaches a 17.5% gain since January. The Fed’s upcoming Meeting Minutes release is watched closely for insights into potential policy shifts. Current expectations point to two quarter-point interest rate cuts over the next two years, with speculation suggesting more cuts by September 2026. FOMC meeting minutes, published three weeks after policy decisions, provide vital clues to the market’s outlook, affecting reactions in the USD depending on whether the tone is bullish or dovish.
With indexes near record highs but trading volumes exceptionally low, we are viewing the next few weeks with caution. The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) is hovering around 12, a low we have not seen since the final quarter of 2024, making options premiums relatively cheap. This suggests the market is complacent, which can be a warning sign ahead of the new year.
The Federal Reserve’s meeting minutes tomorrow are the only major event on the calendar, creating a clear point of potential volatility. Futures markets are pricing in over a 60% chance of two rate cuts by September 2026, which is far more aggressive than the Fed’s own guidance. A failure of the minutes to signal a dovish shift could quickly unwind some of this year’s gains.
Given this binary risk, we are considering purchasing at-the-money straddles on broad market ETFs like the SPY. This strategy profits from a significant price move in either direction, bypassing the need to correctly guess the market’s reaction to the Fed’s tone. The play is on volatility returning to a quiet market, not on a specific directional outcome.
Strategic Market Positions
For those of us holding significant long positions from the 2025 rally, buying out-of-the-money puts on the S&P 500 is a prudent, low-cost hedge. We are also noting the weakness in tech leaders like Nvidia, which is a departure from the trend we saw in the first three quarters of the year. This could be an early sign of a leadership rotation heading into 2026.
However, we must also remember that the market’s reaction to Fed minutes can be fleeting, especially in a low-volume environment. Looking back at the minutes from the November 2024 meeting, we saw an initial 0.5% dip in the S&P 500 that was quickly bought up. Any volatility-based trades should therefore be structured with short-term expiration dates to capture the immediate reaction.