MW U.S. stock futures dip ahead of a busy week on Wall Street
By Mike Murphy
All three major indexes posted gains last week.
With earnings season about to kick off, U.S. stock futures slipped Sunday, after the Dow and S&P 500 closed Friday at record highs.
Dow Jones Industrial Average futures (YM00) were down about 75 points, or 0.2%. S&P 500 futures (ES00) and Nasdaq-100 futures (NQ00) also declined.
West Texas Intermediate crude, the U.S. benchmark, (CLG26) (CL.1) rose 0.6% amid uncertainty around Venezuela's oil industry following President Donald Trump's assertion that the U.S. will control the nation's oil after U.S. military action that deposed President Nicolás Maduro last weekend, and unrest in Iran that has seen hundreds of demonstrators reportedly killed, leading the U.S. to consider a military response. Oil prices rose more than 3% last week.
The price of bitcoin (BTCUSD) gained slightly over the weekend, and was last trading above $90,500.
Precious metals continued to advance Sunday. Gold (GC00), which gained 64% in 2025, is up 3.7% year to date, while silver (SI00), which soared 141% last year, is up more than 12% in 2026.
More: Stocks are signaling that another commodities 'supercycle' is afoot in 2026
On Friday, the Dow and S&P 500 closed at record highs following a decent December jobs report, as all three major indexes closed with weekly gains. For the week, the Dow rose 2.3%, the S&P 500 advanced 1.6% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq gained 1.9%.
Earnings season is set to start this week, with quarterly reports expected from big banks such as Goldman Sachs $(GS)$, JPMorgan Chase $(JPM)$, Bank of America (BAC) and Morgan Stanley $(MS)$.
Investors will also be looking forward to inflation numbers this week, with the release of the the December consumer-price index report on Tuesday, and retail-sales data and the producer-price index for November on Wednesday. The U.S. Supreme Court's impending ruling on the legality of many of Trump's tariffs is also looming over the market.
"The real risk is not whether equities can grind higher from here," Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management, wrote in a note late Friday. "It is whether rates or policy eventually spoil the party. Supply returns next week. Tariff uncertainty re-enters the frame. Volatility remains cheap at the front and quietly bid further out. This is the kind of setup that looks boring until it is not."
-Mike Murphy
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 11, 2026 18:21 ET (23:21 GMT)
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