The 43-day U.S. government
shutdown ended on November 12th, but its impact lingers. Key economic data on
jobs, inflation, and retail sales remain frozen or delayed, leaving investors
navigating in the dark.
U.S. equities whipsawed last week:
a sharp Monday sell-off gave way to a tech-led recovery by Friday's close. With
volatility rising, traders grappled with data scarcity and unresolved policy
questions heading into the holiday season. Below, I•ve shared what's driving
the markets.
Stock Index Performance
- The S&P 500 ticked up 0.08%.
- The Nasdaq 100 slipped 0.21%.
- The Dow Jones Industrial
Average rose 0.34%.
Holiday Cheer or Fear?
- Expectations for imminent
Federal Reserve rate cuts are dimming. Repeated hawkish commentary from
key officials • citing stubborn core inflation and sticky wages • has
pushed market pricing for the next rate cut from near-certainty down
to below
50% odds by December.
- This uncertainty is driving
clear risk aversion for retail investors, who are signaling a marked
retreat from volatile assets. Meanwhile, institutional investors are
buying the dip even as concerns spread across Wall Street.
- Indeed, JPMorgan's position
offers a window into Wall Street's consensus: The economy absorbed shocks,
AI kept driving earnings, mergers and acquisitions revived, tariffs hit
prices more than growth, and the dollar's slide has run its course. Their
prescription stays unchanged: remain invested, stay diversified, and use
volatility to upgrade holdings.
- Despite S&P 500 earnings
growth running at 13% year-over-year,
the index has stalled recently as investors weigh key macroeconomic
factors, leaving top asset allocators focused on sector divergence
(different market sectors experiencing markedly different performance) and
forward guidance over headline earnings strength.
The Week Ahead
- Wall Street enters a critical
period dominated by delayed economic data, corporate earnings, and
shifting global policy signals. Release
of the delayed September jobs report on Thursday, Nov. 20, could set the
tone for risk assets and Fed policy expectations. Initial Jobless Claims,
also on Thursday, and continuing claims will provide real-time insight
into employment trends as investors look for confirmation of labor market
resilience or new cracks.
- Federal Open Market Committee
(FOMC) October Meeting Minutes, to be released on Wednesday, Nov. 19, will
be closely scrutinized for hints about the December and 2026 rate path,
with the market currently
split on the likelihood of a pause versus a cut. Fed officials•
speeches and press appearances will also remain critical for parsing
policy direction.
- Nvidia, the largest company by
market value, reports
earnings on Wednesday, Nov. 19. It will be a bellwether for AI
and tech sector sentiment, with skittish investors looking to its guidance
for cues on broader growth equity prospects.
The convergence of the delayed
jobs report, Fed minutes, and bellwether earnings will heavily influence market
sentiment, asset allocation, and portfolio hedging strategies through
Thanksgiving week.