5 Things to Know Before the Stock Market Opens on December 11, 2025
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Markets brace for another day of traditional finance theater while digital assets quietly build real infrastructure.
Fed Whisperers on High Alert
Every analyst with a Bloomberg terminal is parsing yesterday's FOMC minutes like ancient scripture. The usual suspects—inflation, employment, growth forecasts—get another airing. Meanwhile, decentralized finance protocols execute millions in transactions without a single central banker's input.
Earnings Season Hangover
A handful of major firms report today. Expect carefully managed calls where CEOs highlight 'strategic investments' (losses) and 'revenue diversification' (their core business is struggling). The 10-Q filings will tell the real story, buried in the footnotes most investors never read.
The GDP Revision Ritual
The second estimate for Q3 GDP drops this morning. The number will be tweaked by a few basis points, triggering a flurry of algorithmic trades and breathless cable news coverage. It's a stark reminder of how backward-looking traditional metrics are in a real-time economy.
Oil's Geopolitical Jitters
Crude prices wobble on yet another headline from an unstable region. The energy sector drags the indices along for the ride, a volatile relic of the old economy. Digital asset markets, powered by globally distributed energy, don't have this single point of failure.
IPO Pipeline Check
Rumors swirl about which company might brave the public markets next. It's a months-long, multi-million dollar ordeal of roadshows and regulatory filings. A crypto project can launch a token, bootstrap liquidity, and build a global community in less time than it takes to schedule the first SEC meeting.
So as the opening bell rings on another day of legacy market drama, remember: the real financial innovation isn't happening on the floor of the NYSE. It's being coded, governed, and traded on-chain—24/7/365.
Stock Futures Slip As Tech Sector Under Pressure
Stock futures are pointing to a slightly lower open on Thursday, a day after major indexes closed near record highs following the Federal Reserve's decision to cut its key interest rate. This morning, tech stocks are leading the declines as Oracle shares are tumbling after the company released its quarterly results. (see more below) Futures tied to the S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq were recently down 0.3% and 0.5%, respectively, while Dow Jones Industrial Average futures hovered near unchanged. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which affects borrowing costs on all sorts of loans, was at 4.12% this morning, down from 4.16% at yesterday's close and a three-month high of 4.21% early yesterday. Bitcoin was at $90,300 recently, down from yesterday afternoon's high above $94,000. Gold futures were up 0.5% at $4,245 an ounce, while WTI crude oil futures slipped 1.2% to $57.80 an ounce.
The Fed Has Been Cutting Rates. Will That Continue?
The Federal Reserve has been steadily cutting rates in recent months—but it's far from certain that more cuts are on the way anytime soon. After trimming its benchmark rate on Wednesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that the current fed funds rate is at the high end of the "neutral" range where Fed officials think the rate is neither turbocharging the economy with easy money nor slowing it down with high borrowing costs. The Fed is "well-positioned to determine the extent and timing of additional adjustments based on the incoming data, the evolving outlook and the balance of risks," Powell told reporters. Fed officials are projecting just one additional cut in 2026, according to the Summary of Economic Projections released Wednesday, while financial markets are pricing in the likelihood that the Fed will stand pat at least through March. President Donald TRUMP has been pushing the Fed to aggressively cut interest rates, and he's set to replace Powell when the Fed Chair's term expires in May.
Oracle Stock Sinking After Earnings Report Revives AI Bubble Concerns
Oracle (ORCL) shares are plummeting this morning after the cloud computing giant's latest earnings report included sales that fell short of estimates. Oracle's new agreements with AI giants Meta Platforms (META) and Nvidia (NVDA), which grew its backlog of orders to $523 billion, did not appear to answer investor concerns about an AI bubble. The stock has more than given back the gains that it saw after last quarter's report, when shares soared to a record high. In the months since, investors and analysts have raised questions about Oracle's reliance on a small number of customers and whether the new debt it will take on to build out AI infrastructure could put its financial health in jeopardy. Oracle shares were down 13% in recent premarket trading.
Broadcom Earnings Due After The Closing Bell
Broadcom (AVGO) will give investors another indication of the health of the AI trade when the chipmaker releases its results after the closing bell today. Broadcom is expected to report record revenue figures thanks to booming AI demand, though analysts have warned that the company faces risks. One potential threat: Alphabet's (GOOGL) Google is looking to design its own future generations of AI chips in house, rather than the current generation that it has designed in partnership with Broadcom. For now, however, Broadcom is riding high; its stock hit a record high Wednesday and has gained nearly 80% in 2025. Shares were down about 1% ahead of the bell this morning.
Coca-Cola Names New CEO to Take Over in March
One of America's most well-known brands is getting a leadership shakeup in the new year. Coca-Cola (KO) said after the bell Wednesday that COO Henrique Braun will step into the role of CEO in March. Current CEO James Quincey, who has led the soda Maker for nine years, will become executive chairman. Braun, who joined the company in 1996, has been COO since the start of this year. He previously served in a number of roles leading several of Coca-Cola's international segments. Shares of the beverage maker, which have gained 13% since the start of the year, were little changed in premarket trading.