From Black Friday to Fed Wednesday: The Year-End Data Investors Must Watch

Key Takeaways

  • Official data is back on, with jobs, spending, and sentiment readings in the queue ahead of the Fed meeting

  • Macro reports are in focus now that an impressive Q3 earnings season is in the books

  • Economic data paired with recent corporate body language lay the groundwork for how investors should position heading into 2026

Plenty of official economic data is already coming down the market’s chimney, much to the delight of our partners at Econoday. Now that the pesky government shutdown is over, the pace of macro updates is set to accelerate as we head into the end of 2025.

We already received key November purchasing managers’ index (PMI) readings from S&P Global and the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) earlier this week. Then, this morning’s ADP private-sector employment report shed new light on the health of that swath of the labor market.

A Frosty Look at the Jobs Environment

Thursday and Friday could be particularly revealing regarding employment. According to our Economic Calendar, first thing Thursday morning (December 4) comes the in-vogue Challenger Job Cuts report. Recall that for October, the aggregate number of announced layoff intentions soared to the most since 2003 for that month. Of course, Challenger’s monthly tallies were higher this past February and March, when federal government employment took a hit courtesy of the Department of Government Efficiency’s efforts.

Thursday also provides a timely glimpse into the trend of applications for unemployment benefits. Take this week’s Initial and Continuing Claims data with a grain of salt, though, as there’s notorious trouble with properly accounting for holiday-week dynamics. Nevertheless, Initial Claims remain sanguine, while Continuing Claims hover near the highest level in four years. “Slow to hire, slow to fire”—no changes on that macro front.

Leftovers on the Economic Table

This week’s data twist plays out on Friday (December 5). Stale data hits the tape at 10 a.m. ET by way of September Personal Income and Spending numbers. The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation barometer—the Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) Price Index—is often the market-moving detail.

Maybe not so much this time. Bond traders are nearly locked in on a quarter-point rate cut next Wednesday afternoon, so even a hot report probably won’t sway the Fed. What’s more, being a September flash, it’s about as fresh as last week’s turkey and pumpkin pie at this point.