The government shutdown dominated
headlines last week, halting key economic data and leaving investors to rely on
private signals. Even so, markets held steady on expectations of another
Federal Reserve rate cut at month-end.
Earnings have been mixed while
regional bank jitters and shifting tariff talk from the administration added
volatility • but resilience is the theme for equity markets.
With that overview noted, let•s
look at the most important things you need to know.
Stock Index Performance
- The Dow Jones Industrial
Average climbed 1.56%.
Economic Data & Shutdown
Impact
- The economy enters mid-October
in a fog, with the three-week shutdown freezing key reports from inflation
to payrolls. September•s Consumer Price Index (CPI) is delayed until
October 24th, and jobs and spending data are on hold indefinitely. This
leaves the Fed •flying blind• as it heads into its October 29th policy
meeting.
- Investors are relying on private
gauges. Jobless claims suggest the labor market remains solid, though
filings by furloughed federal workers are climbing. The Institute for
Supply Management (ISM) manufacturing index ticked up to 49.1, still
contractionary but hinting at stabilizing output and easing costs.
- The growth drag from the
shutdown looks modest: about 0.15 percentage points of gross domestic
product (GDP) per month by Goldman Sachs• math. But the bigger risk is
confidence, with gridlock weighing on business sentiment. Inflation
expectations remain near 3%, and markets now largely expect one more Fed
cut this month • more insurance than stimulus in a data-starved economy.
The Week Ahead
- U.S.-China tensions and
political risk remain in focus. Investors are watching President Donald
Trump•s stance on a proposed 100% tariff package after last week•s partial
pullback, with any renewed escalation likely to hit industrials and
semiconductor stocks.
- Meanwhile, the government
shutdown is clouding economic visibility, draining an estimated $15
billion a week in lost output.
- Earnings season kicks into high
gear this week, with S&P 500 profits expected to rise about 8%, led by
tech, industrials, and financials. Energy and consumer staples are set to
lag, while investors focus on margins under cost pressure, AI spending•s role
in lofty valuations, and the impact of slowing global demand on cyclical
revenues.
While Washington•s standoff
lingers and markets keep a close eye on monetary signals, we remain focused on
helping you cut through the noise. Periods like this can also open the door to
new opportunities, and my priority is to guide you forward with clarity,
confidence, and a long-term perspective.