In today’s Steady Investor, we are taking a deeper dive into key market factors that we believe investors should keep an eye on:
The U.S. Government Shuts Down. What That Means for the Economy and Markets – The U.S. government officially entered a shutdown this week, after lawmakers failed to pass a stopgap spending bill before the September 30 deadline. Investors may take this impasse as bad news for markets and the economy, but history shows shutdowns are far more headline-grabbing and political posturing than they are economically significant.
To be fair, the impact is not zero. Some government business operations like loan approvals, permit issuances, or defense contracting get delayed. Economic data releases from agencies like the Bureau of Labor Statistics may be paused or delayed. National parks may experience closures.Some major banks estimate that the shutdown could shave 0.15% – 0.2% off GDP per week, but much of that is typically recovered once the government reopens and workers receive back pay. The CBO found the longest shutdown on record, in late 2018 and early 2019, reduced GDP by just -0.02% for the full year.
Meanwhile, many core economic activities, like Social Security payments, air traffic control, and Federal Reserve functions, continue unaffected.For their part, markets have also shown time and again that shutdowns are not catalysts for sustained downturns. Stocks often wobble in the run-up to a closure but tend to rise during and after. The private sector drives over 90% of U.S. economic activity, and equity markets are focused on forward-looking conditions.1
Retiring in Today’s Market? Make Sure Your Plan Can Withstand What’s Next
Markets are in transition, the Fed is cutting short-term rates, long-term yields are climbing, and inflation remains a risk. For soon-to-be retirees, these shifts can create uncertainty about how to protect savings and generate reliable income.
Our free Retiree Checklist2 helps you navigate these challenges, and includes insights such as:
Let us help you feel ready for this next chapter. If you have $500,000 or more to invest, get our free guide today!
Download Zacks Guide, Looking to Retire Soon2
The Supreme Court Weighs in On Fed Independence – This week, the U.S. Supreme Court temporarily blocked the effort to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, preserving her position at least through January (when the Court will hear the case in full). While the high court did not rule on the underlying legal question, its move added some clarity to the question of Fed independence.The issue centers on whether the president has the unilateral power to remove Fed governors “for cause,” a vague standard that dates back to the Federal Reserve Act of 1935.
While the Court’s decision this week was brief, just two sentences, it carries weight. It distinguishes the Fed from other agencies, and signals that the Fed’s quasi-independent status may deserve unique legal consideration. From an investor’s standpoint, the implications are more about precedent and perception than immediate policy. Central bank independence, long considered a cornerstone of monetary credibility, has no explicit constitutional protection. It instead rests on narrow statutory language, Senate confirmation norms, and the market’s faith in apolitical monetary oversight. Undermining this balance risks injecting more volatility into interest-rate expectations and long-term bond markets, especially if political pressure begins influencing future rate decisions.
The Court’s decision, for now, should reinforce the guardrails. Investors should stay tuned in early 2026, when the Court takes up the full case.3
Private Data Shows Further Cracks in the Labor Market – With the government shutdown likely putting a freeze on official jobs data, all eyes turned to private payroll processor ADP this week. And the report looked bleak.
ADP’s September employment report showed a 32,000-job decline, the steepest drop since early 2023. It also revised August’s initial gain of 54,000 to a small loss. Still, a few details are worth noting. Big companies (500+ employees) added 33,000 jobs. Small businesses (under 50 employees) lost 40,000. That divergence isn’t new, but it is widening. Higher interest rates, stickier costs, tariffs, and tighter credit conditions have been weighing more heavily on smaller firms, which lack the cushion and pricing power of larger corporations.
As long as tariffs remain the norm, we believe small businesses will continue to see disproportionate impact. Another key takeaway from ADP’s report was that wage growth continued apace, rising 4.5% year-over-year for all workers and 6.6% for those switching jobs. This is a historically strong figure. In our view, income growth matters more than job growth for gauging consumer spending’s staying power. And that spending, in turn, is a core engine of U.S. economic growth.4
Your Retirement Checklist Built for Today’s Market – The Fed’s recent rate cuts, higher long-term yields, and lingering inflation can reshape retirement income and portfolio risk in ways many investors overlook.
That’s why we created Looking to Retire Soon?⁵, a free guide with practical strategies for today’s market, including:
If you have $500,000 or more to invest, get your free guide today!
Download Zacks Guide, Looking to Retire Soon5
Disclosure