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Weekly Market Insights 10/6/2025

📈 Markets Melt Up to New Records

U.S. equities, once again, climbed to record highs last week, extending their impressive 2025 run as investors brushed off government shutdown headlines and leaned into a familiar narrative of cooling economic data, dovish Federal Reserve expectations, and AI-driven optimism. The S&P 500 rose over 1% on the week as “bad news” once again became “good news” for markets anticipating easier monetary policy ahead (more rate cuts).

Soft data points including weaker ADP employment, Consumer Confidence, and ISM Services PMI readings bolstered expectations for rate cuts later this month. Rather than sparking growth fears, the string of soft prints reassured investors that the Fed remains on track towards easing. That backdrop, coupled with a massive wave of AI enthusiasm following OpenAI’s $500 billion private valuation, fueled momentum in growth and tech names and kept investor sentiment strong even as fiscal uncertainty lingered in Washington.

According to Refinitiv data, U.S. equity funds attracted roughly $36 billion in fresh inflows last week — the largest in several months. This highlights a seemingly renewed appetite for risk on Wall Street. But despite the strong index performance, underlying breadth was mixed, suggesting new highs were driven by heavyweights rather than a broad market surge.

💹 Rates, Dollar & Commodities

Treasury yields fell across the curve as the week’s softer data reinforced expectations for a Fed rate cut at the October meeting. The 10-year yield dipped just under 4% while short-term rates eased a bit as well. The U.S. dollar weakened modestly, unwinding some of its summer strength and lending support to commodities and emerging-market assets.

Gold extended its winning streak to a seventh consecutive week, climbing to its highest level in months thanks to those falling real yields, a softer dollar, and heightened demand for monetary hedges. Oil prices traded unevenly, weighed down by global demand concerns early in the week before rebounding on signs of tightening U.S. inventories and ongoing supply risks in the Middle East. Meanwhile, industrial metals such as copper and aluminum posted mixed performances as investors weighed tepid manufacturing data against longer-term structural demand tied to electrification and clean energy infrastructure.

🔎 Takeaway

Last week reaffirmed a powerful dynamic: Weak data is still fueling strong markets. With the Fed leaning dovish, the dollar softening, and AI optimism still commanding capital flows, equities continue to climb a wall of worry seemingly undeterred by political noise and macro uncertainty.

Source: Stockcharts.com

🔮 Looking Ahead – Jobs, the Fed, and a looming shutdown…

The ongoing government shutdown poses a real wildcard. Essential economic releases might be delayed, scrapped, or under-reported. Thankfully this week was already planned to be very light as far as data releases. The biggest focal point will be the release of the September FOMC minutes. Investors will parse the internal debate over rate cuts, dissent levels, and projections of future policy in an attempt to gauge the Fed’s next move as they listen to several FOMC board members’ speeches.  Other than that, Friday’s University of Michigan consumer sentiment report will give a peek at how people feel about things and their expectations for the future.

🌐 Broad Overview

Markets continue to juggle several competing forces, but optimism has clearly been in charge. Expectations for further Fed rate cuts, ongoing AI-driven enthusiasm, and resilient consumer demand have lifted major U.S. indices to new highs. Inflation has cooled sharply from its peak. At the same time, the labor market is softening in an orderly way, supporting hopes for a sustainable expansion rather than a downturn.

The traditional “smart money” gauge, aka the bond market, echoes that confidence. Treasury yields have declined as investors price in an easier policy path, and credit spreads remain tight, signaling steady risk appetite and faith in the economy’s resilience. Together, both stocks and bonds are sending the same message: The soft-landing scenario, where the Federal Reserve slows inflation without triggering a recession,  remains alive and well.

Historically, October tends to be the most volatile month of the year while Q4 is historically the strongest quarter for stocks. With all the political noise and a Federal Reserve who has demonstrated their willingness to let the economy “Run Hot”, this could end up being the path for this year.

Should you have any questions regarding your current strategy or the markets in general, please reach out to your CIAS Investment Adviser Representative.