US equity markets finished the final trading day of the year in negative territory as sellers dominated thin year-end volumes. The Standard and Poor’s 500 fell 50.74 points to close at 6,845.50, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 303.77 points to end at 48,063.29. The Nasdaq Composite slipped 177.09 points to 23,241.99, with technology names among the weakest performers as investors took profits after a strong year.
BRICS markets performance at year-end
Global activity was mixed, with several BRICS and partner markets showing resilience despite the US pullback. India stood out, where the S&P BSE Sensex advanced 545.52 points to finish at 85,220.60, extending a strong run through the year. Mainland China recorded modest gains, with the SSE Composite up 0.09 percent to 3,968.84, while Taiwan and other Asian technology-heavy indices showed selective strength.
Elsewhere in the BRICS group performance differed by market. South Africa’s Top 40 USD Net TRI Index fell 37.27 points to 7,004.80, reflecting profit-taking and risk-off flows. Egypt posted gains as the EGX 30 Price Return Index rose 139.00 points to 41,829.00. Indonesia inched higher, the IDX Composite closing marginally up, while commodity sensitivity left some regional currencies and resource-linked markets under pressure.
Market participants noted the lingering effects of trade tensions earlier in the year. A mid-year rout triggered by an administration announcement that escalated tariffs had dented sentiment but did not stop major indices from finishing the year near record levels. Keith Buchanan, a senior portfolio manager at Globalt Investments, said market participants appear to have adjusted to a regime of more targeted and gradual tariff measures, allowing investors to look beyond near-term policy shifts.
Foreign exchange trading reflected a clean sweep for the US dollar on the session. The dollar strengthened against a range of major currencies, with EUR/USD slipping to about 1.1738 and USD/JPY rising toward 156.85. Commodity-linked currencies underperformed, and the Australian and New Zealand dollars recorded notable declines. A firmer dollar and softer commodity prices added pressure to resource-dependent economies and influenced flows into certain emerging markets.
European markets closed mixed as investors wrapped up positions. Germany’s DAX outperformed, gaining 0.57 percent, while the FTSE 100 in London edged lower. Asian markets were broadly weaker though select benchmarks, including Taiwan’s TWSE, finished higher. The overall pattern was cautious positioning ahead of the new year combined with selective strength in markets that enjoyed strong gains earlier in the year.
Trading volumes remained subdued on the final session, which is typical for year-end activity. That lower liquidity tends to amplify moves as funds and institutional investors rebalance portfolios. Despite the final three-day pullback in the US, the larger picture for the year showed robust gains across many major equity markets, and BRICS markets in particular demonstrated varied but generally resilient performance as investors judged prospects for growth and policy through the coming year.
Markets will focus on incoming economic data and central bank signals after the holidays, with currency dynamics and commodity prices likely to remain important drivers for BRICS economies and other emerging markets in the months ahead.
Key Takeaways:
- US markets closed the year lower but near record highs as investors pared positions ahead of the new year.
- BRICS markets performance varied: India posted strong gains while China and several regional markets showed selective strength.
- The US dollar strengthened broadly, weighing on commodity-linked currencies and influencing emerging market moves.

















