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The Weekly Bottom Line

Our summary of recent economic events and what to expect in the weeks ahead.

Date Published: October 17, 2025

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Highlights

  • Alternative data helped fill the void of official releases due to the ongoing government shutdown. The Cleveland Fed’s Inflation Nowcasting model estimated core inflation remained around 3% (y/y) in September.  
  • The Chicago Fed’s Advance Retail Trade Summary indicated retail & food services sales excluding autos were healthy in September. 
  • Fed Chair Powell signaled that the central bank could soon reach a point where it may stop reducing the size of its balance sheet, also known as quantitative tightening. 

Reading the Tea Leaves Amidst the Data Fog


Chart 1 shows the share of businesses raising and planning to raise average selling prices, and the share of businesses citing inflation as their top business problem. All three of these metrics recorded an uptick in September.

This week’s U.S. economic landscape remained shrouded in fog due to the lack of official data amidst the ongoing government shutdown. If it continues until Monday, it will be the third longest in history. In the official data drought, focus has shifted to alternative indicators, particularly from the Federal Reserve, which is still operating during the shutdown. US-China trade tensions ebbed and flowed, while concerns surrounding regional banks made a comeback, weighing on equity markets. Still, equities managed to eke out some gains, with the S&P 500 up 1% from last Friday’s low. Bond yields declined amid uncertainty and expectations of further monetary easing. Notably, the 10-Year Treasury yield fell below 4% and is now hovering near last year’s level.

In the absence of the CPI report, alternative inflation indicators are sending conflicting signals. The Cleveland Fed’s Inflation Nowcasting model estimated core inflation at 0.26% month-over-month in September, suggesting year-on-year core inflation remained near 3%. The lack of acceleration would support another Fed rate cut amidst a deteriorating labor market. However, the Fed’s Beige Book reported further price increases, with several districts noting “faster input cost growth due to higher import prices and rising costs for services like insurance, health care, and technology”. The NFIB’s small business survey also showed moderate upticks in its price metrics (Chart 1). The CPI report is set to be released next week, which should help clear some of the fog.

The September retail sales report is also delayed, but the Chicago Fed’s Advance Retail Trade Summary (CARTS), which tracks weekly sales, offers some insight. CARTS indicates that retail & food services sales excluding autos rose by 0.5% in September, suggesting a solid finish to the third quarter (Chart 2). However, given ongoing uncertainty and other consumer challenges, momentum is expected to ease in the fourth quarter. The Beige Book echoed this, noting that overall consumer spending, especially on retail goods, trended down in recent weeks, with auto sales being the main exception.

Chart 2 shows the month-over-month change in U.S. retail and food sales excluding autos, along with control group sales. The latter excludes some volatile categories and is used in calculating GDP. The two series shown in the chart are highly correlated. With September data missing, information from the Chicago Fed Advance Retail Trade Summary (CARTS) is used as a leading indicator. CARTS indicates retail and food sales excluding autos grew at a decent clip of 0.5% in September, keeping with the growth pace of recent months.

On the employment front, the Beige Book described labor demand as “subdued” and employment levels as “largely unchanged”. More employers reported lowering headcount through layoffs and attrition, citing weak demand, high uncertainty, and, in some cases, increased investment in AI. Layoffs were mentioned 14 times, up from 6 previously. NFIB employment metrics also pointed to a weak hiring trend among small businesses in September.

Fed Chair Powell reiterated recent messaging and placed more emphasis on labor market risks in a speech this week, supporting additional easing. Powell also signaled the central bank could soon stop reducing the size of its balance sheet. While he provided no set timeline for the end of quantitative tightening (QT), he stated “we may approach that point in the coming months,” noting early signs that liquidity conditions are gradually tightening.

Reading the tea leaves, labor market risks remain the key focus. As such, the Fed is likely to deliver another rate cut at the end of this month. The signal that QT may soon end further reinforces the Fed’s dovish stance.

Admir Kolaj, Economist | 416-350-8927

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