Markets tiptoed into Christmas with records on thin ice.
US equities notched fresh highs in a shortened session, Japan saw a landmark private-equity exit under activist pressure, oil rebounded on growth optimism shadowed by geopolitics, and crypto remained stuck in holiday limbo.
Precious metals quietly stole the spotlight as uncertainty lingered.
Here’s what moved, and what barely did, as global markets wound down for the break.
S&P 500 hits record high on thin Christmas Eve volume
US stocks surged on Wednesday as Wall Street wrapped up early for the holidays, with the S&P 500 recording an intraday record high of 6,921.42 before noon closure.
The benchmark rose 0.15% in a truncated session that ended at 1 p.m. ET, while the Dow gained 0.35% and the Nasdaq stayed essentially flat.
Micron Technology surged 4% to a new peak after last week’s strong forecast, and bank stocks notched fresh highs as financials rose 0.4%.
Gold and silver continued their structural climb to record levels as geopolitical tensions and monetary uncertainty drove precious metals demand.
Trading was predictably thin, with desks lightly staffed, most players sat tight rather than chase new positions heading into Thursday’s full market closure.
Sapporo ditches real estate arm in landmark $3B PE play
Japan’s Sapporo Holdings finally sealed the sale of its real estate business to a KKR-PAG consortium for ¥477 billion ($3.06 billion), ending a months-long activist pressure campaign.
Singapore’s 3D Investment Partners had hammered the brewer over sloppy capital allocation, Sapporo was sitting on premium Tokyo property while its beverage margins sagged.
The deal closes in stages: KKR-PAG snags 51% by June 2026, then buys the rest over three years.
The crown jewel is Ebisu Garden Place, Tokyo’s mixed-use landmark with offices, retail, and housing. Sapporo plans to recycle the cash into beer and soft drink growth rather than managing property.
The private equity play reflects Japan’s real estate awakening, as deflation fades and rates stay low, investors eye Japanese trophy assets.
Oil bounces on growth optimism
Crude inched higher Wednesday as traders juggled stronger-than-expected US economic growth against mounting geopolitical risks.
Brent rose to $62.38 a barrel while WTI climbed to $58.38, capping a five-session rally that’s lifted both benchmarks roughly 6% off last week’s five-year lows.
The catalyst: Q3 GDP crushed forecasts at 4.3% annualized growth, signaling durable consumer demand even as the Fed navigates inflation controls. Yet headwinds loom.
Trump’s Venezuela blockade, two tankers seized over the weekend, threatens to disrupt global supply, with China retaliating diplomatically.
Russia-Ukraine attacks on energy infrastructure add uncertainty. US crude inventories ballooned 2.39 million barrels last week, suggesting demand isn’t matching supply yet.
Bitcoin drifts sideways around $87K
Bitcoin traded in a tight $86,350-$87,780 range on Wednesday, hovering near $87,380 after a sleepy holiday session.
Volume stayed low as traders took off for Christmas, with BTC dipping just 0.05% from the prior day’s $87,430 open.
The king coin hovered in its stubborn $85K-$90K band all month, defying Santa rally dreams despite Wall Street’s record highs.
Down 28% from October’s $126K peak, BTC’s market cap sat at $1.74 trillion amid broader crypto weakness, total cap slipped 1.1% to $3 trillion.
Fear index ticked up as gold shone brighter. Investors eye options expiry and 2026 policy shifts for the next spark.
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