Stock futures were steady on Sunday night, as global markets reacted to the U.S.' attack on Venezuela and capture of leader Nicolas Maduro.

Stock futures were steady on Sunday night, as global markets reacted to the U.S.' attack on Venezuela and capture of leader Nicolas Maduro.

Asia markets opened the first official trading week of 2026 on a stronger note after the U.S. said it captured Venezuela's Nicolas Maduro, with oil prices easing.

"The physical global oil market situation remains the same. Oil prices have declined due to an oversupplied global oil market."

European stocks are expected to open in mixed territory Monday as global markets react to the U.S.' capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro.

Geopolitical shocks historically have little impact on the stock market, and, additionally, investors do not expect the attack will escalate further.

The 30-stock Dow touched an all-time high on Monday and closed at a record as oil names jumped.

The S&P 500 and the Dow Industrials popped to new records on Tuesday. The blue-chip Dow posted its first close above 49,000.