Last week, U.S. markets whipsawed through the shortened week
as tariff threats and business surveys shifted expectations for growth and
Federal Reserve policy. Stocks tumbled on Europe and Greenland tariff fears
before recovering quickly,
while fresh data confirmed consumer strength and easing prices, supporting a
gradual slowdown without recession and keeping the Fed on hold.
Below is the rundown and outlook.
Stock Index Performance
- The S&P 500 fell 0.35%.
- The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.30%.
- The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 0.53%.
What the Latest Data Shows
- Consumer spending remained strong through year-end
2025. Personal spending rose 0.5%
in both October and November, with broad gains across services like health
care and financial services and goods like recreational items and
clothing. Real spending climbed 0.3% in November, even as income growth
remained modest and the savings rate slipped to 3.5%, indicating consumers
are still willing to spend but have less cushion than before.
- Inflation continues its slow grind lower but isn't at
target yet. The Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE)
index rose 0.2%
in November, putting the annual rate at 2.8%, just above October's 2.7%.
While still elevated compared to the Fed's 2% goal, the trajectory
supports continued disinflation without alarming policymakers or forcing
their hand on rate cuts.
- Business activity is expanding but losing steam. January's
flash Purchasing Managers• Index (PMI) survey showed the
private sector still growing, but momentum is clearly slowing from the
stronger second half of 2025. Manufacturing picked up slightly while
services held steady, yet new orders remained weak across both sectors and
companies reported near-stagnant hiring amid cautious sentiment and
elevated costs.
- The Fed expected to pause with room to cut later. Solid
growth paired with inflation above 2% gives the central bank no
reason to rush into rate cuts at this month's meeting. But with
business surveys pointing to softer demand, a weaker labor market, and
gradual disinflation, the door remains open for cuts later in 2026 if the
slowdown continues.
The Week Ahead
- Wednesday's Federal Reserve decision will dominate the
week, with markets expecting rates to hold at 3.5•3.75% while trying to
parse Fed Chair Jerome Powell's hints on future cuts. Importantly,
December•s Producer Price Index (PPI) (Jan. 30) will be one of the first
•clean• looks at wholesale inflation since the data blackout, while
investors will scrutinize it to see if businesses are absorbing higher
input costs or passing them to customers.
- Major tech names, including Meta, Microsoft, Tesla, and
Apple, will report earnings alongside blue-chip heavyweights like
UnitedHealth and Exxon Mobil. With Q4 earnings expected
to be up 8•9% overall and 2026 growth projected at nearly 15%, investors
need to see profit strength broaden beyond tech.
As we look ahead, the economy's path remains steady but
moderating. A major test lies in whether more companies can deliver solid
profits to justify current valuations and fuel further gains.