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Wall Street is mixed on the first trading session of 2026. Precious metals are back in rally

U.S. stock prices fell after the opening bell of Friday as the Nasdaq held on to gains due to the strength in semiconductors and precious metals continued their rally.

Investors ended the week by beginning the new year with all three major U.S. indices reversing their gains.

All three indexes are on course to lose money for the holiday-shortened week.

Thomas Martin, Senior Portfolio Manager at Globalt, Atlanta, said: "When you turn over a new page, as a money manager you wait to see what the vibe will be for the year ahead. "The narrative doesn't really change." "So far, this morning the 2025 winners are doing pretty well."

The 2025 gold price rise was the largest in 46 years. Silver and platinum also saw their biggest gains ever. This was due to a combination of factors, including rate cuts by the Fed, geopolitical tensions, central bank purchases and ETF flows.

Stocks?made strong gains by 2025, as markets weathered an year of tariffs wars, longest government shutdown in U.S. History, geopolitical strife, and threats to independence from central banks.

The Fed's Year Ahead Markets will be focused on monetary policy this year, as Jerome Powell nears the end of his tenure at the Federal Reserve and as economic data returns to a more regular release schedule following the federal government shutdown. The central bank's path could be determined by a series of delayed indicators that are due to arrive in the next few days.

Martin continued, "Maintaining Fed independence will be one of the most important things." "Even though (U.S. president Donald) Trump appointed the newest members and they are more dovish they want to give at least the appearance that Fed is independent. Once you lose this, you're like in trouble."

The extent to which markets begin to reap the ?benefits of massive investments in nascent artificial-intelligence technology will also likely receive close scrutiny in the year ahead.

There will also be some geopolitical volatility in 2013, with the midterm elections in the U.S. Congress this fall and ongoing negotiations to end Russia's conflict in Ukraine.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 49.71 points or 0.10% to 48,113.00. The S&P 500 dropped 2.83 points or 0.04% to 6,842.67. And the Nasdaq Composite declined 30.11 points or 0.13% to 23,211.89.

European shares started the year with record highs. Defense stocks were a major contributor to this. Investors watched the STOXX 600, as it approached its 6,000-point milestone. London's FTSE 100 index, which includes the blue-chip stocks of London, has reached the 10,000-point milestone for the first.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 3.23 points or 0.32% to 1,017.97.

The pan-European STOXX 600 Index rose 0.7% while Europe's FTSEurofirst 300 Index rose 17.32 points or 0.73%.

Emerging-market shares rose by 24.26 points or 1.73% to 1,429.58. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan closed at 735.02, up 1.72%, while Japan's Nikkei dropped 187.44, or 0.37% to 50,339.48.

GOLD AND SILVER CONTINUE SPARKLE

The precious metals recovered from their end-of-year losses as geopolitical tensions fueled demand.

Spot gold increased by 0.53%, to $4,336.77 per ounce. Spot silver rose by 1.3%, to $72.20 an ounce. Dollar remained essentially unchanged in the wake of the largest annual drop for the greenback in eight years.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback in relation to a basket of currencies, including the yen, the euro and others) fell by 0.05%, falling to 98.20. Meanwhile, the euro rose 0.05%, reaching $1.1751.

The dollar fell 0.06% against the Japanese yen to 156.57.

Bitcoin grew 1.16% in value to $89 319 30. Ethereum increased 3.12% to $3.079.77.

The U.S. Treasury yields were expected to post their third daily gain in a row.

The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10 year notes increased 2.4 basis points from late Wednesday to 4,177%.

The 30-year bond rate rose 3.1 basis points to 4.861%, from 4.83% at the end of Wednesday.

The yield on the 2-year bond, which is usually in line with expectations of interest rates for the Federal Reserve (Fed), rose 0.4 basis points to 3.473% from 3.469% at late Wednesday.

Investors weighed geopolitical risk against concerns about oversupply as oil prices fell after their largest annual loss since 2020.

U.S. crude dropped 1.06%, to $56.81 per barrel. Brent was down to $60.16 a barrel.

(source: Reuters)