Stock futures are little changed after Dow rises to record on U.S.’ capture of Venezuela leader: Live updates

Jan 5, 2026
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ExxonMobil Corp. signage on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Monday, Jan. 5, 2026.

Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Stock futures were near flat Monday night. The action came after the three major averages rallied on the U.S.’ capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and President Donald Trump’s call for American energy giants to invest in the oil-rich nation.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 19 points or 0.04%. S&P 500 futures added 0.04%, while Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.07%.

The 30-stock Dow closed at a record on Monday. Markets rallied after the U.S. captured and ousted Venezuelan leader Maduro over the weekend, while Trump encouraged big investments from U.S. oil companies. The market moves suggest that investors this time are pushing aside fears of bigger geopolitical conflicts and remain confident in risk-on assets as the new year begins.

“I think the Venezuelan situation was really a non-event for equities in general,” Barry Knapp, Ironsides Macroeconomics director of research, said Monday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.”

In regular trading, the Dow gained nearly 595 points, or about 1.2%, notching an all-time high and a record close. The S&P 500 advanced about 0.6%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite rose nearly 0.7%, with growth stocks Tesla and Amazon seeing gains.

Shares of several energy companies and defense giants rallied on bets that they could benefit from Trump’s push for U.S. oil players to rebuild Venezuela’s energy sector. A White House official told CNBC on Monday that the Trump administration has spoken to multiple oil companies about Venezuela, but did not specify which companies the administration has spoken to or when the conversations took place.

Chevron closed 5.1% higher on Monday, given that it is the only major U.S. oil company with current operations in Venezuela. Exxon Mobil and oilfield services companies Halliburton and SLB jumped, and General Dynamics and Lockheed Martin also received a boost.

Alongside the rally in U.S. equities, gold futures saw their best day since Oct. 20 as investors also piled into the safe-haven asset. U.S. oil futures settled 1.7% higher.

“Historically, headline-capturing geopolitical events can produce short-term volatility and falling equity prices,” Tom O’Shea, director of research and investment strategy at Innovator ETFs, said. “However, in this instance, the S&P 500 rose on the first trading day following the operation, with energy stocks leading the gains on anticipation that U.S. companies may benefit from potential infrastructure rebuilding in Venezuela. Defense stocks, precious metals, and Bitcoin also rallied, suggesting a mixed investor response.”

Nvidia is joining the race to develop self-driving cars

Nvidia on Monday unveiled plans to test a robotaxi service with a partner as soon as 2027, highlighting the chipmaker’s ambition to become a major player in the world of self-driving cars. 

The service would be offered with a partner, and would employ cars with “Level 4” driving, meaning they will be capable of driving without human intervention in pre-defined regions, Nvidia officials said at a self-driving demonstration in San Francisco last month. The company declined to name where it would operate and who its partner will be. “We will probably start with a limited availability but work with the partner for us to get our footing,” Xinzhou Wu, Nvidia’s vice president of automotive, said at the event.

Self-driving cars remain one of the primary areas where Nvidia can show growth outside of AI infrastructure.

“We imagine that someday, a billion cars on the road will all be autonomous,” Huang said at a launch event on Monday at the CES conference in Las Vegas. “You could either have it be a robotaxi that you’re orchestrating and renting from somebody, or you could own it.”

— Kif Leswing

U.S. stock futures open little changed

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