US equity markets finished the year on a subdued note on Wednesday as investors squared positions ahead of the new year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 303.77 points to close at 48,063.29, while the S&P 500 slipped 50.74 points to 6,845.50 and the NASDAQ Composite fell 177.09 points to 23,241.99. Trading volumes were light, a typical feature of year-end sessions, but all three major indices ended the year close to record highs.
Market participants said the final three-day pullback reflected profit-taking and cautious positioning rather than a broader shift in outlook. The S&P 500 traded in a narrow range between an intraday low of 6,844.55 and a high of 6,901.42, having reached a 52-week high earlier in the year.
Keith Buchanan, senior portfolio manager at Globalt Investments, told CNBC that lessons from mid-year policy moves appear to be informing investor expectations. “Smarter, more narrow tariffs with gradual implementation is what the market can absorb,” he said. Buchanan added that the market is looking beyond tariff shifts and expects corporate America to adjust in ways that preserve margins.
US stocks year-end close shows cautious sentiment
The retreat in technology names was a notable contributor to the NASDAQ decline after a strong year for the sector. With volumes thin, large-cap tech stocks were sensitive to profit-taking. The Dow’s loss reflected similar positioning, with the blue-chip index oscillating between session extremes as traders finalised portfolios.
In foreign exchange markets the US dollar enjoyed a clean sweep, gaining ground against most major currencies. The euro slipped to 1.1738 against the dollar, while USD/JPY rose to 156.85. Sterling weakened modestly to 1.3455 versus the dollar and USD/CHF moved to 0.7931. Commodity-linked currencies underperformed; the Australian dollar fell to 0.6673 and the New Zealand dollar dropped to 0.5754.
Global equities were mixed on the last trading day of the year. In Europe Germany’s DAX outperformed, closing up 0.57 percent at 24,490.41, while the FTSE 100 and France’s CAC 40 were largely flat. Asian markets showed divergent moves: Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 0.87 percent to 25,630.54 and Japan’s Nikkei slipped 0.37 percent, but Taiwan’s TWSE and mainland China’s SSE posted modest gains.
Notably for BRICS+ markets, India’s S&P BSE Sensex rose strongly, gaining 545.52 points to finish at 85,220.60, underscoring investor appetite for Indian equities as global flows seek higher returns. Mainland China’s SSE Composite added 0.09 percent to 3,968.84, while South Africa’s Top 40 index eased modestly.
Commodities and regional resource stocks weighed on some markets. The Canadian S&P/TSX Composite closed lower amid weakness in resource and financial names, and softer oil prices supported the dollar’s strength against the Canadian dollar.
Overall, the session capped a year of strong gains across major equity markets despite earlier volatility linked to trade policy announcements. With the new year underway, investors will be watching central bank signals and early economic data for clues on how markets might fare in the months ahead.

Key Takeaways:
- US stocks closed lower on New Year’s Eve with the Dow down 303.77 points and the S&P 500 near record levels despite the pullback — US stocks year-end close reflected cautious positioning.
- The US dollar strengthened broadly, weighing on commodity-linked currencies and pressuring Australian and New Zealand dollars.
- Global markets were mixed: Germany outperformed while Hong Kong and Tokyo fell; India’s Sensex finished notably higher.

















