CES 2026, Sector Rotation and Other Key Things to Watch this Week

Markets enter 2026’s first full trading week with an extraordinary convergence of events including the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas where Nvidia (NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang and AMD (AMD) CEO Lisa Su will deliver keynote speeches that could significantly influence AI infrastructure investment narratives following recent sector volatility. The week features a comprehensive economic data calendar building to Friday’s December jobs report at 8:30am, which will provide the final employment snapshot of 2025 and potentially influence Federal Reserve policy expectations after the central bank’s more hawkish December meeting. Monday’s ISM Manufacturing data kicks off the week with insights into industrial sector health and pricing pressures, while Wednesday delivers an intensive convergence of ADP employment, ISM Non-Manufacturing data, and JOLTS job openings that together will paint a complete picture of labor market and business activity conditions. The absence of major earnings allows economic data and CES technology announcements to dominate market attention as institutional participants return from holiday breaks and establish 2026 positioning. The week will test whether markets can sustain momentum from any year-end Santa Claus Rally or if concerns about Fed policy, inflation persistence, and AI spending sustainability will pressure stocks early in the new year.

Here are 5 things to watch this week in the Market.

CES 2026: AI Hardware Innovation Showcase

The Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas brings heightened focus to semiconductor leaders as Nvidia (NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang and AMD (AMD) CEO Lisa Su deliver keynote speeches that could determine AI infrastructure sector sentiment heading into 2026. Huang’s presentation will be scrutinized for announcements about next-generation AI accelerators beyond the Blackwell architecture, data center roadmaps, and any commentary about customer demand sustainability following recent concerns about return on AI capital expenditures. New product reveals, partnership announcements, or updated AI performance metrics could either reinforce Nvidia’s technology leadership or raise questions about competitive threats from custom chips developed by hyperscalers. AMD’s Lisa Su faces pressure to demonstrate credible AI accelerator momentum with MI300 series adoption and competitive positioning against Nvidia’s dominance in data center GPUs. Any major wins with cloud service providers or enterprise customers could boost AMD’s credibility in AI infrastructure markets. Both keynotes will be watched for commentary about AI application evolution, edge computing developments, and the sustainability of current investment cycles. The CES announcements come at a critical juncture following Oracle and Broadcom’s disappointing earnings that triggered sharp selloffs in AI-related stocks, making this week’s messaging particularly important for sector stabilization.

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