Next Week’s Data Releases: Markets Take It All In

Although we will publish individual indicators on Friday, April 3, 2026, markets will be closed in observance of Good Friday. As a result, we will not be releasing our Weekly Economics next week. This makes the upcoming slew of data particularly important for markets, as investors digest the first measurable economic signals following the latest geopolitical shock. Next week’s releases should help clarify whether recent volatility remains contained or begins to translate into weaker fundamentals.

From a macro perspective, the US economy still enters this period from a position of relative strength. Investment spending remains well supported by the Inflation Reduction and CHIPS acts as well as by continued momentum related to artificial intelligence (AI) deployment, which has helped anchor growth and offset potential downside pressures. Financial conditions, while tighter than in prior cycles, have not yet derailed activity. However, the distribution of that resilience remains uneven. Roughly 10% of households continue to drive about half of total consumption, a dynamic that markets have increasingly internalized through strong equity performance and elevated asset prices. Unlike prior expansions, this cycle has leaned far more on financial wealth accumulation than on broad-based income or employment growth, leaving consumption – and market sentiment – more exposed to asset price swings.

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For markets, this means that the current macro equilibrium remains highly sensitive to equity performance. As long as stock prices avoid a sharp and sustained correction, headline growth is likely to hold up reasonably well.