Data Decoder: Deciphering Messages in Key Reports

Back when cereal boxes contained prizes, one popular item was a "secret decoder ring" that let kids send and decipher hidden messages. These days, cereal boxes just contain cereal, but grown-up investors might hanker for "magic" rings to help them read important messages hidden within popular market data.

Investors are inundated with numbers, and flashy headlines draw most of the attention. Macro readings like jobs growth, gross domestic product, and retail sales often move markets. Understanding these is just part of the job, however. Most reports also contain nuggets of information—buried beneath the headlines—that can shed more light once deciphered.

Consider the monthly U.S. durable goods orders report. In March 2025, orders for all durable goods across the economy—including aircraft and military equipment—rose an astonishing 9.2% from February. On its face, that looked like great news, countering talk of a slowing economy.

But just looking at the report's headline wouldn't have told the entire story. Savvy investors invested further to focus on just a sliver of the report that excludes defense goods and aircraft orders. This number, sometimes called "core capital goods," is considered a helpful proxy for business spending plans. The core reading rose just 0.1% that month, coming in below analysts' expectations and hinting that all was not well in the business world.

Failure to note such distinctions could hurt an investor's ability to understand and anticipate how the market will respond to data. But investors who know what to look for tend to get more nutrition from each daily helping of data, even without a magic ring.

"The devil is often in the details, so it's up to the individual investor to perform the necessary due diligence to dig beneath the headline figures to understand what economic trends may be developing," said Nathan Peterson, director of derivatives analysis at the Schwab Center for Financial Research.

Here are a few other crunchy nuggets to consider getting to know, though you won't find them in your favorite cereal.