New Year, New Records for Stocks

Stocks built on their advances from last year to rally to records in the new year, trudging higher despite rising geopolitical tensions with Venezuela and mixed jobs reports. 

The S&P 500 rallied 1.6% to finish the week at fresh all-time highs of 6,966.28 points — up 1.8% for 2026. In a sign of the rally broadening, 10 out of 11 sectors participated in the gains, with only utilities closing in the red. The information technology sector barely finished in the green, up 0.02% for the week.

“The broader market has been performing much better than large-cap technology, and most Magnificent Seven stocks — outside of Alphabet and Amazon — have largely been consolidating,” Fundstrat Head of Technical Strategy Mark Newton said. 

One indicator suggests that the gains could continue for the year. The January Barometer dictates that “as January goes, so goes the full year,” with a special focus on the first five days of the month, so it could be perceived as a good thing that the S&P 500 increased 1.1% during that period this year. 

Historical data backs up this claim. Since 1950, the S&P 500’s average annual return is 12%. Out of that sample size of 76 years, the index has finished in the green during the first five days for 49 years, and in those instances, the full year gain is 16%. During the 27 years that the index declined during the first five days, the calendar year gain is a mere 3%, according to Fundstrat’s research team, which makes the argument that the January Barometer is important to watch. 

“Part of me says it’s intuitive because if stocks do well out of the gate, then it kind of shows you there’s demand for equities,” Fundstrat Head of Research Tom Lee said. “So, I don’t think it’s so crazy.”

Multiple labor market reports were released this week, though investors remain focused on Friday’s monthly nonfarm payrolls data. The U.S. economy added 50,000 jobs in December, coming in below expectations of 73,000 jobs, but the unemployment rate edged down to 4.4% and the November level was revised down to 4.5% from 4.6%. 

It reassured investors that there is still room for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates.

“In December, Fed Chair Powell says he’s not contemplating hikes and is now dependent on the evolution of the jobs market. A put on the economy is a put on the stock market,” Lee said. 

Investors were arguably even more relieved Friday to know that the Supreme Court decision pertaining to tariffs was pushed back to next week.

New Year, New Records for Stocks

Chart of the Week

New Year, New Records for Stocks

Given that there’s been three years of back-to-back bonanza gains, some investors are still bearish. An analysis by Lee’s team sheds some light there. There’s been four times in history when the S&P 500 has gained over 15% for three straight years. In one of those instances, when stocks rallied during the first five days, the annual return was 20%. For the other three instances, stocks declined an average of 10% when they didn’t inch higher during the first five days. That suggests that 2026 could shape up to be another year of gains. 

Recent ⚡ FlashInsights

The Supreme Court today failed to hand down its much anticipated decision on the Trump tariffs. No new decision day was announced. This decision has huge implications for the President’s trade policy and for Congress if it needs to take action due to the decision. Stay tuned this is a big deal.
Jan 9 · 12:44 PM
MAGS 0.74%  Roundhill’s Magnificent 7 ETF has largely been sideways since August, so the resilience of many US Markets hitting new all-time highs shows the ability of many sectors to have rebounded to help buoy market indices despite the lagging of “Mag 7” I expect that AAPL, TSLA starting to rebound coupled with NVDA turning back up should be a catalyst for outperformance in Tech which should last into February as “Mag 7” starts to rebound and QQQ breaks out
Jan 9 · 11:17 AM
TSLA 2.15%  also is rebounding following its pullback into key support at $420-$425 into mid-week. Yesterday’s reversal coupled with today’s upside follow-through is a technical positive for this stock which has now broken the downtrend from 12/22 peaks. I anticipate that TSLA should claw back to new highs in the weeks ahead with first resistance near $460, then $473 and then $499 being very important near last December peaks. This looks like an excellent risk/reward given its two-week decline which brought momentum down while larger intermediate-term uptrends remain very much intact. I am expecting a good one-month bounce out of TSLA from current levels and will discuss upside targets as the stock hopefully makes progress in the weeks ahead.
Jan 9 · 11:16 AM

FS Insight Video: Weekly Highlight

Key incoming data

  • 1/2 9:45 AM ET: Dec F S&P Global Manufacturing PMI Tame
  • 1/5 10:00 AM ET: Dec ISM Manufacturing PMI Tame
  • 1/6 9:45 AM ET: Dec F S&P Global Services PMI Tame
  • 1/7 10:00 AM ET: Oct F Durable Goods Orders MoM Tame
  • 1/7 10:00 AM ET: Nov JOLTS Job Openings Tame
  • 1/7 10:00 AM ET: Dec ISM Services PMI Tame
  • 1/8 8:30 AM ET: Oct Trade Balance Tame
  • 1/8 8:30 AM ET: 3Q P Unit Labor Costs Tame
  • 1/8 8:30 AM ET: 3Q P Nonfarm Productivity QoQ Tame
  • 1/8 11:00 AM ET: Dec NYFed 1yr Inf Exp Tame
  • 1/9 8:30 AM ET: Dec Non-farm Payrolls Tame
  • 1/9 10:00 AM ET: Jan P U. Mich. 1yr Inf Exp Tame
  • 1/13 6:00 AM ET: Dec Small Business Optimism Survey
  • 1/13 8:30 AM ET: Dec Core CPI MoM
  • 1/13 10:00 AM ET: Oct New Home Sales
  • 1/14 8:30 AM ET: Nov Retail Sales
  • 1/14 8:30 AM ET: Nov Core PPI MoM
  • 1/14 10:00 AM ET: Dec Existing Home Sales
  • 1/15 8:30 AM ET: Jan Philly Fed Business Outlook
  • 1/15 8:30 AM ET: Jan Empire Manufacturing Survey
  • 1/15 4:00 PM ET: Nov Net TIC Flows
  • 1/16 10:00 AM ET: Jan NAHB Housing Market Index
New Year, New Records for Stocks

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New Year, New Records for Stocks

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