Economic news was surprisingly supportive of a rate cut later this month, but this was not apparent in the news headlines. Regarding inflation, Reuters wrote “US consumer inflation increases steadily, but households paying more for food and rents.” The actual CPI report showed headline inflation was unchanged at 2.7% YOY and core inflation fell from 2.8% to 2.6% YOY in December. (Note: Due to the government shutdown, there was no inflation report for October, and only partial data for November. However, for our charts, we left October data unchanged from September and incorporated BLS data for November and December. The BLS release has a chart showing headline inflation falling from 3% in September to 2.7% in November/December and core CPI falling from 3% in September to 2.6% in November/December.)
It is true that food inflation was 3.1% in December, up from 2.6% in November but this was due to stubborn inflation seen in meats, poultry, fish, and eggs at 3.9%. However, this category is down from 4.7% in November and a recent peak of 7.9% in March 2025. The other culprit in the food category is nonalcoholic beverages and beverage materials which indicated prices rose 5.1% YOY, up from 4.3% YOY in November. Food away from home has always remained high and in December it showed prices up 4.1% YOY versus 3.7% in November. Yet despite the increases in food inflation, core CPI fell because energy price inflation fell from 4.2% YOY in November to 2.3% YOY in December. The Reuters headline regarding rents is true since prices are typically rising except for periods of recession or depression, but it is still misleading since homeowners’ equivalent rent was 3.4% YOY, down fractionally from November and down from 3.8% in September. In short, don’t rely on headlines if you want the real news.
The ISM nonmanufacturing index was 54.4 in December, up from 52.6 and six of the nine components rose during the month. The declines were seen in suppliers’ deliveries, order backlog, and prices paid (a plus!). The employment index was 52.0, up from 48.9, and the sum of employment in both surveys now totals 96.9. This is good news since it carries this index safely into neutral territory and above the danger zone of 92.1 or less. See page 6. This is especially reassuring since the December job report was worrisome.
The employment report indicated a below consensus 50,000 jobs were created in the month of December. However, the underlying data was weaker since previous months were reduced by a net 76,000 jobs. In short, the 3-month average fell to a loss of 22,330 jobs per month. Most concerning is that the year-over-year change in employment shows the growth rate fell to 0.4% YOY, which is well below the long-term average of 1.7% YOY. Note that when the year-over-year change in jobs turns negative it is a near-certain sign of a recession. In contrast, the household survey was more sanguine and showed the unemployment rate fell from 4.5% in November to 4.4% in December. This was due in large part to a decrease in the civilian labor force and a 278,000 decline in the number of people unemployed. The U6 unemployment rate fell from 8.7% to 8.4%. See page 3.
Deceleration in the labor market is obvious in the numbers. Over the last twelve months, the average growth in jobs was 48,670 per month; this fell to 14,500 per month over the last six months. The current 3-month change shows a loss of 22,330 jobs per month. As we noted, December’s household survey was the most positive of the two BLS surveys, but while the household survey tends to be volatile it rarely diverges from the establishment survey for long. See page 4. Keep in mind that the jobs report for January will incorporate several revisions including the annual benchmark revision. The BLS already estimated this benchmark revision will show that the economy generated 911,000 fewer jobs than reported between April 2024 and March 2025. This amounts to roughly 71,000 fewer jobs a month, far fewer than the original estimate of 147,000 jobs created per month. On a happier note, the misery index (the sum of the unemployment rate and the rate of inflation) is 7.1% and well below the 12.5% negative level.
Under normal circumstances December’s weak employment report coupled with December’s mild inflation report might inspire the Federal Reserve to lower rates at their January 27-28, 2026, meeting. However, the controversy over subpoenas sent to Powell asking for more information regarding the Fed’s $2.5 billion renovation project may result in a harder stance by the FOMC later this month.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell announced over the weekend that he has been indicted by the Department of Justice; however, President Trump said he was unaware of the situation. US Attorney Jeanine Pirro stated that the word indictment only came from Powell and subpoenas would not have been needed had he responded to requests for information. Nevertheless, President Trump’s comments calling Powell “incompetent or a crook,” only stoked the situation into a global media frenzy.
Equities, particularly financial stocks, fell this week after President Trump said credit card rates should be capped at 10%. We doubt that any president has the power to cap credit card rates; nevertheless, equity prices fell. President Trump is also fomenting uncertainty by urging Iranians to continue to protest and indicating that “help is on the way.” He also announced his intention to impose 25% tariffs on countries doing business with Iran. These events have pushed the capture of Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela, Greenland, and the pending Supreme Court decision on tariffs, to the background. Of these, only the decision on tariffs will have economic ramifications, in our view.
What is most important for investors is fourth quarter earnings season. In 2025, the equity market was supported by a steady string of positive earnings surprises. This will be more difficult to accomplish in 2026, but we believe it is possible. Financials typically start the earnings season and JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s (JPM – $310.90) results were less than stellar and this weighed on the stock market on Tuesday. Ten more financial stocks will be reporting fourth quarter results this week. Good earnings reports are critical.
The LSEG IBES consensus earnings estimate for 2026 fell $0.04 to $313.84 this week. The S&P Dow Jones estimate for 2026 fell $0.42 to $310.43. Our estimate for 2026 is $315, and we believe this could prove to be conservative. Although PE multiples appear rich, it is important to note that the forward earnings yield for the S&P 500 is 4.6% and the dividend yield is 1.2%. This sum of 5.8% compares well to a 10-year Treasury bond yield of 4.2%. Plus, the 12-month sum of S&P 500 operating earnings shows growth of 14.2% YOY, far better than the 75-year average pace of 8.1% YOY. On a technical basis, breadth data has been bullish. The NYSE cumulative advance/decline line made a record high on January 13, 2026. This means that advancing stocks outnumbered declining stocks despite the 398.21-point decline in the Dow Jones Industrial Average on January 13th. The 10-day average of daily new highs is currently 461 and the 10-day average of daily new lows is 77. Since the new high list is averaging well over 100 per day, this is positive. Some have worried that sentiment has become too bullish; however, the AAII bullish index is at 42.5% and bearishness is at 30%. This is far from the 50/20 split that is negative. We remain a buyer of weakness.
Gail Dudack
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