News

GPT-5.2 is looking like another leap forward

Posted on: Dec 12 2025

Leaked internal benchmarks for GPT-5.2 "Thinking" have been posted by Sam Altman, and quite frankly, the numbers are ridiculous. We aren't talking about incremental gains here.

For some reference:

  • AIME 2025: 100.0%. It solved it. This is a big math test and it means that competition math is effectively "completed" for this model.

  • ARC-AGI-2: This is the big one for the AGI purists. It jumped from 17.6% (GPT-5.1) to 52.9%. That is a massive leap in abstract reasoning and generalization—historically the Achilles' heel of LLMs.

  • GDPval (Knowledge Work): This is the metric that matters for the economy. It flew from 38.8% to 70.9%.

It's also worth noting that this highlights that scaling and reasoning are both advancing as this is a model that uses maximum reasoning efforts. Lately, it looked like OpenAI got caught with its pants down because Gemini scaled and it worked but this shows that reasoning is doing things that looked impossible.

For users, the thinking models aren't that popular because they're slow for every day tasks to replace Google but for innovation, this is huge. What the dual-releases show is that both tracks are still working. Ultimately, there will be a 'best of both' that unlocks something beyond this.

This is also big for the economy. GDPval tests well-specified knowledge work tasks spanning 44 occupations.

At the moment, this release is being rolled out and we're going to see if the use cases match the numbers. What we aren't seeing is what the lesser models do. This release includes 5.2 Thinking but also GPT‑5.2 Instant and Pro.

What OpenAI says:

"Overall, GPT‑5.2 brings significant improvements in general intelligence, long-context understanding, agentic tool-calling, and vision—making it better at executing complex, real-world tasks end-to-end than any previous model."

That's exciting but this screenshot is also making the rounds:

This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.
investingLive Americas FX news wrap 5 Dec

Posted on: Dec 06 2025

  • Tech and consumer lead US stocks higher; Utilities and energy drag down market
  • The US Federal Reserve rate decision the highlight next week
  • US consumer credit for October $9.18 billion versus $10.50 billion estimate
  • The World Cup of foreign exchange begins
  • Baker Hughes oil rig count +6 to 413
  • Most major European indices close lower and near lows for the day
  • Trump says he's getting along very well with Canada and Mexico
  • Bessent: China agreement is going well
  • G7 and EU in talks on full ban on Russian maritime services
  • USDINR Technicals: USDINR sellers took their shot, but missed. Buyers are back in control.
  • US personal income for September 0.4% versus 0.3%. PCE for September 0.3% versus 0.3% exp
  • December prelim UMich consumer sentiment 53.3 vs 52.0 expected
  • Tech sector rallies: semiconductor stocks soar, Netflix drags entertainment sector down
  • ECB's Villeroy: We are in a good position, not a comfortable one
  • Canadian dollar rises to ten-week high after the third strong jobs report in a row
  • Canadian November employment change +53.6K vs -5.0K expected
  • The USD is mixed to start the NA session. What are the technicals telling traders?
  • investingLive European markets wrap: Dollar steadies on calmer risk appetite, eyes on Fed

The USD is closing mixed on the day with the USD moving the most vs the CAD after stronger Canada GDP data. The USDCAD fell by -0.93% and closed below its 100 and 200 day MAs above and below the 1.3900 level (see technical post here).

The USD was also lower vs the AUD (by -0.44%). For that currency pair, it rose around 1.4% this week - the biggest mover for the week (see post here).

The other changes vs the major currencies were more modest on the day:

  • EUR: Unchanged
  • GBP -0.01%
  • CHF +0.11%
  • NZD -0.23%

As mentioned, Canada delivered a much stronger-than-expected November jobs report, posting a 53.6K employment gain versus a -5.0K decline expected, following +66.6K in October. The unemployment rate dropped to 6.5%, well below the 7.0% forecast, though partly helped by a dip in the participation rate to 65.1% from 65.3%. The composition was mixed: full-time employment fell by 9.4K, while part-time jobs surged by 63.0K, down from the prior month’s 85.1K. Wage growth for permanent employees held steady at 4.0% year-over-year. After months of conflicting signals — weak data in July/August followed by strong prints in September/October — this report delivers a decisive upside surprise, pushing joblessness sharply lower and contradicting expectations of labor-market cooling. With the Bank of Canada already signaling a pause, today’s data raises the possibility of renewed tightening discussions and may prove a game-changer for the Canadian dollar. The move below the 100/200 day moving averages increased the bearish bias.

In the US, the U.S. personal income rose 0.4% in September, beating expectations of 0.3%, while personal consumption increased 0.3%, matching forecasts. Headline PCE inflation rose 0.3%, keeping the year-over-year rate at 2.8%, its highest level in a year. Core PCE, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, increased 0.2% on the month, with the YoY rate holding at 2.8%, slightly below the 2.9% expected. Excluding food, energy, and housing, PCE rose 0.2%, unchanged from last month. Overall spending climbed by $65.1 billion, driven overwhelmingly by a $63.0B increase in services and $2.1B in goods, showing that consumer demand remains steady even as inflation edges higher.

The preliminary December University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index rose to 53.3, beating expectations of 52.0 and improving sharply from 50.3 previously. The current conditions component softened slightly to 51.0 (vs. 51.3 expected and 52.3 prior), while expectations jumped to 52.1 (vs. 51.2 expected and 49.0 prior), signaling improving forward-looking sentiment. Inflation expectations eased meaningfully: one-year inflation fell to 4.1% from 4.7%, and five-year inflation slipped to 3.2% from 3.6%. While the UMich survey has known limitations, the Fed still monitors it closely, and the drop in inflation expectations represents a clear green light for potential rate cuts—a development equity markets typically welcome.

Looking at the US stock market, the major indices moved mostly higher to end the week:

  • Dow industrial average +0.22%
  • S&P index +0.19%
  • NASDAQ index +0.31%

For the trading week:

  • Dow industrial average but 0.50%
  • S&P index +0.19%
  • NASDAQ index +0.91%

In the US debt market, yields were higher

  • 2-year yield 3.562%, +3.4 basis points
  • 5 year yield 3.714%, +3.2 basis points
  • 10 year yield 4.139%, +3.1 basis points
  • 30 year yield 4.794%, +3.1 basis points

Looking at other markets:

  • Crude oil rose $0.47 or 0.79% t $60.14
  • Gold fell $10.46 or -0.25% to $4197.45
  • Silver rose $1.19 for 2.10% to $58.29
  • Bitcoin reversed back to the downside today with a decline of $-3084 to $89,022.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
US 500 forecast: the index resumed growth but correction risk remains high

Posted on: Dec 03 2025

US 500 has shifted into an uptrend, but the likelihood of a slight pullback remains high. The US 500 forecast for today is negative.

US 500 forecast: key trading points

  • Recent data: US manufacturing PMI for November came in at 52.2
  • Market impact: these figures are generally positive for the equity market

US 500 fundamental analysis

The US manufacturing PMI in the latest release came in at 52.2 points versus a forecast of 51.9 and the previous reading of 52.5. This means the manufacturing sector remains in expansion territory (readings above 50.0 indicate growth), but the pace of expansion slowed slightly compared to the previous month. At the same time, the higher-than-expected reading suggests that business conditions are somewhat better than the market anticipated.

For the US 500, the impact is cautiously positive. Since the index includes industrial, technology, and consumer companies, a moderately strong PMI supports the soft landing narrative: the economy continues to grow, but without excessive acceleration that could force the Fed back into tightening. Within the index, stocks of real-sector companies sensitive to manufacturing activity may perform slightly better under such conditions.

US manufacturing PMI: https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/manufacturing-pmi

US 500 technical analysis

The US 500 index broke above the 6,690.0 resistance level, with a new one yet to form. The support level is located at 6,535.0. The potential upside target could be near 6,950.0.

The US 500 price forecast considers the following scenarios:

  • Pessimistic US 500 forecast: a breakout below the 6,535.0 support level could push the index down to 6,410.0
  • Optimistic US 500 forecast: if the price consolidates above the previously breached resistance level at 6,690.0, the index could climb to 6,950.0
US 500 technical analysis for 2 December 2025

Summary

Overall, this combination appears moderately positive for the US equity market. On the one hand, investors receive confirmation that the manufacturing sector is not slipping into recession: companies still have orders, capacity utilisation remains stable, and demand holds up. This supports revenue and earnings expectations in cyclical sectors such as industrials, machinery, commodity companies, and parts of the transport sector. On the other hand, the slight decline in the PMI compared to the previous month reminds markets that the economy is gradually cooling. From a technical perspective, the US 500 index may rise towards 6,950.0.

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