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Week Ahead on Wall Street: The Fed’s Meeting Minutes

The government shutdown continues this week and there’s little sign of a near-term resolution. With betting markets expecting it to drag on for weeks, investors will need to continue navigating through an economic data fog. Two important sources of clarity will help pierce through the cloud, however.

First and foremost: Though most government data is on hold during the shutdown, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a critical exception. Due to its importance in calculating annual cost-of-living adjustments for Social Security benefits, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) announced it’ll be releasing the report on Friday. Already the most tracked by market participants, this report is even more important while investors are making due without other economic data.

And we can’t forget about corporate America. The pace of third-quarter earnings reports picks up significantly this week, with a host of companies from various sectors set to share their results. These reports will provide a real-time, bottom-up perspective on the health of the economy, straight from those who are on the business front lines.

Economic and Earnings Calendar

Most releases involving government data will not be released while the shutdown is ongoing.

Monday

•  September Leading Economic Index: This is an index composed of various economic indicators that have historically led changes in the broader economy.

•  Earnings: Steel Dynamics (STLD), W R Berkley (WRB)

Tuesday

•  October Philadelphia Fed Non-Manufacturing Activity: The Philadelphia Fed’s survey of services executives in the region on business conditions and their outlook.

•  Earnings: Chubb (CB), Capital One Financial (COF), Quest Diagnostics (DGX), Danaher (DHR), Equifax (EFX), Elevance Health (ELV), EQT (EQT), General Electric (GE), General Motors (GM), Genuine Parts (GPC), Halliburton (HAL), Intuitive Surgical (ISRG), Coca-Cola (KO), Lockheed Martin (LMT), 3M (MMM), Nasdaq (NDAQ), Netflix (NFLX), Northrop Grumman (NOC), Omnicom Group (OMC), PACCAR (PCAR), PulteGroup (PHM), Philip Morris International (PM), Pentair (PNR), Raytheon Technologies (RTX), Texas Instruments (TXN)

Wednesday

•  Weekly Mortgage Applications: Mortgage activity gives insight on demand conditions in the housing market.

•  Earnings: Amphenol (APH), Avery Dennison (AVY), Boston Scientific (BSX), Crown Castle International (CCI), CME Group (CME), FirstEnergy (FE), Globe Life (GL), Hilton Worldwide Holdings (HLT), International Business Machines (IBM), Interpublic Group of Companies (IPG), Kinder Morgan (KMI), Lennox International (LII), Lam Research (LRCX), Southwest Airlines (LUV), Las Vegas Sands (LVS), Moody’s (MCO), Molina Healthcare (MOH), Northern Trust (NTRS), NVR (NVR), O’Reilly Automotive (ORLY), Packaging of America (PKG), Raymond James Financial (RJF), AT&T (T), Teledyne Technologies (TDY), Thermo Fisher Scientific (TMO), Tesla (TSLA), United Rentals (URI), Westinghouse Air Brake Technologies (WAB)

Thursday

•  August Wholesale Inventories and Sales: Wholesalers often operate as an intermediary between manufacturers and retailers, serving as a key part of the goods supply chain.

•  Weekly Jobless Claims: This high frequency labor market data gives insight into filings for unemployment benefits.

•  Fedspeak: Kashkari will moderate a conversation with Barr at the Economic Club of Minnesota. San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly will take part in a moderated conversation on technology and the economy.

•  Earnings: Delta Air Lines (DAL), PepsiCo (PEP)

Friday

•  October University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment: How consumers feel about economic conditions affect their spending habits. This survey places a particular focus on inflation and its trajectory.

•  September Treasury Statement: This summarizes the U.S. federal government budget by tracking government revenues and expenditures.

•  Fedspeak: Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee will give welcome remarks at the regional bank’s Community Bankers Symposium. Musalem will take part in a fireside chat on the economy and monetary policy.

 
 
 
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Please understand that this information provided is general in nature and shouldn’t be construed as a recommendation or solicitation of any products offered by SoFi’s affiliates and subsidiaries. In addition, this information is by no means meant to provide investment or financial advice, nor is it intended to serve as the basis for any investment decision or recommendation to buy or sell any asset. Keep in mind that investing involves risk, and past performance of an asset never guarantees future results or returns. It’s important for investors to consider their specific financial needs, goals, and risk profile before making an investment decision.

The information and analysis provided through hyperlinks to third party websites, while believed to be accurate, cannot be guaranteed by SoFi. These links are provided for informational purposes and should not be viewed as an endorsement. No brands or products mentioned are affiliated with SoFi, nor do they endorse or sponsor this content.

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A Surprisingly Easy Way to Take the Bite Out of Big Bills

This article appeared in SoFi's On the Money newsletter. Not getting it? Sign up here.

Let’s say you log into your bank account, and zap: You see that your home insurance or tuition has just taken a big chunk off your balance. It’s a legitimate bill, but you’ve been distracted by 10,000 other things and forgot that you’d put it on autopay. Now you’ll have to scramble to make sure you’ve got enough money to cover your other expenses.

Some bills — property taxes, college tuition, car or home insurance, HOA dues, club fees, or vehicle registrations — are more likely to wreak havoc on your finances because you may only pay them once or twice a year (or at least on a less-than-monthly basis.) For gig and freelance workers, it’s often a big income tax bill that catches you off guard.

But what if you took the automatic concept from auto-pay and used it to auto-save as well? Just as you might already be putting 10% or 20% of every paycheck straight into your 401(k) or IRA, you can plan in advance, funnelling set amounts of your income into accounts designated for other specific expenses. Smaller chunks can make big bills feel a lot more manageable.

Chris Colson, a payments expert at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, calls it good old-fashioned earmarking, just with a digital twist.

“As programmable payments become more common, an old-school budgeting idea is making a comeback: earmarking,” Colson wrote in a recent blog post. “It’s a simple concept, but when combined with automation, it could be the budgeting upgrade many people and businesses have been waiting for.”

(Pro tip: Even though monthly payments can be an option for things like car insurance or propane, consider the tradeoffs if you give up pay-in-full discounts.)

So what would you need to do? The key is to make technology do as much of the work as possible — and keep you disciplined.

•   Make your list: It’s easy to forget all the bills you have, especially if it’s been 11 months. Comb back through your credit card and bank transactions to make a list of the less-frequent but significant bills you want to save up for.

•   Do the math: For each bill on your list, divide the amount by the number of months before it’s due again. That’s how much you’ll need to set aside each month. For example, to pay your boat’s annual $1,200 marina slip fee, you’d need to set aside $100 per month. (You can also divide your bill by 52 to get a weekly amount.) And if you know your bill is likely to go up, maybe add in an extra month’s worth.

•   Set up the rules: Use your bank or budgeting app to separate your paycheck and other income into buckets allocated for each bill. Set up recurring transfers so the fixed dollar amounts you determined in the previous step are automatically deducted each week or month. (With SoFi Savings Vaults, you can set up as many as 20 different customized buckets – and earn a competitive interest rate.)

•   Consider this method for more than bills: You can use this savings approach for any large, infrequent expenses. Holiday gifts, back-to-school shopping, or anniversary trips. (Think of it as the envelope or cash-stuffing method, but in automated, digital form.)

Related Reading

•  Automatic Savings Plan: What it Means, How it Works, Example (Investopedia)

•  5 Ways To Grow Your Savings With Automatic Transfers (Bankrate)

•  AI Budgeting Tools: Personal Finance Management (SoFi)


Please understand that this information provided is general in nature and shouldn’t be construed as a recommendation or solicitation of any products offered by SoFi’s affiliates and subsidiaries. In addition, this information is by no means meant to provide investment or financial advice, nor is it intended to serve as the basis for any investment decision or recommendation to buy or sell any asset. Keep in mind that investing involves risk, and past performance of an asset never guarantees future results or returns. It’s important for investors to consider their specific financial needs, goals, and risk profile before making an investment decision.

The information and analysis provided through hyperlinks to third party websites, while believed to be accurate, cannot be guaranteed by SoFi. These links are provided for informational purposes and should not be viewed as an endorsement. No brands or products mentioned are affiliated with SoFi, nor do they endorse or sponsor this content.

SoFi isn't recommending and is not affiliated with the brands or companies displayed. Brands displayed neither endorse or sponsor this article. Third party trademarks and service marks referenced are property of their respective owners.

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Liz Looks at: Markets During a Shutdown

Closing Time

We’ve become accustomed to government funding debates and the drama as we approach each potential shutdown. Typically, they’re “solved” in the 11th hour. Not this time.

For the first time since 2018, the U.S. government shut down due to unresolved funding arguments between Democrats and Republicans.

Government Funding Lapses



However, this shutdown comes with a much different backdrop than 2018, which lasted 35 days: Markets have been strong, the Fed just cut rates, and the unemployment rate is rising. The opposite was true on all three accounts in 2018.

From an investor sentiment perspective, we’re in much better shape today than we were then. Late 2018 was marred by a confusing message from the Fed and rate hikes that fueled a swift market sell-off of nearly 20% in the fourth quarter. Much like today, the Fed was on a normalization path, but it was hiking rates from a historically low level.

Now the Fed is cutting to normalize rates as the economy cools and inflation pressures abate. This is not to say that a government shutdown is no big deal. It is a big deal and it has many consequences. But given the supportive sentiment backdrop, we may be able to manage through this in markets.

Friday Is Cancelled

One of the wrinkles investors may have to contend with is that the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) won’t release economic data during the government shutdown. The next jobs report, due out this Friday, is an important piece to the Fed’s rate cut puzzle. Markets are watching this data closely, especially after large downward revisions in the prior few months and the recent firing of the head of the organization.

If the ADP employment report (a private sector survey that does get released during a shutdown) is any preview, the labor market continued to cool in September. It’s worth noting, though, that the ADP and BLS data don’t usually show a clear relationship and can often paint very different pictures.

ADP Private Employment Change




Adding to the muddiness is how the shutdown may affect the labor data for October. Even if short-lived, government shutdowns typically result in furloughs of federal employees. Though markets have historically done fine during and after a government shutdown (more on this below), this is an inconvenient time to have less visibility into labor data.

Distraction More than Detraction

Over the past 50 years, the government has shut down 20 times for an average of eight days each time. As unsettling as a shutdown may be, markets have weathered the storms quite well.

The chart below shows S&P 500 performance for the three months following the end of each shutdown, with a median return of 2.4%. In all of these cases, there were other things going on in the background that affected markets, but it’s important to note that the shutdowns didn’t seem to be the instigator of major drawdowns on balance.

S&P 500 3-Month Price Return Post-Shutdown




I’m writing this column on day one of the shutdown, so there are still many unknowns. Some believe this could last 3-4 weeks and result in permanent layoffs (rather than furloughs), but the reality is we really don’t know. What we do know is that it’s very possible, if not probable, that political polarization will continue. So markets will need to digest ongoing policy uncertainty.

Although frustrating for investors to live through, markets have looked through shutdowns in the past, regarding them more as distractions than serious volatility triggers. With this in mind, a steady hand is crucial. It’s important to resist any knee-jerk reactions during the early days. Stay prudently present in markets.

 
 
 
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SoFi can’t guarantee future financial performance, and past performance is no indication of future success. This information isn’t financial advice. Investment decisions should be based on specific financial needs, goals and risk appetite.

Communication of SoFi Wealth LLC an SEC Registered Investment Adviser. Information about SoFi Wealth’s advisory operations, services, and fees is set forth in SoFi Wealth’s current Form ADV Part 2 (Brochure), a copy of which is available upon request and at www.adviserinfo.sec.gov. Liz Thomas is a Registered Representative of SoFi Securities and Investment Advisor Representative of SoFi Wealth. Form ADV 2A is available at www.sofi.com/legal/adv.

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September 2025 Market Lookback

Political Pressure

It took a while, but the moment many investors were waiting for finally arrived. The Federal Reserve lowered interest rates for the first time since December, aiming to guard against the risk of further deterioration in the labor market.

The Fed cut its benchmark 25 basis points as political pressure to lower borrowing costs posed the biggest test of the Fed’s independence since the 1970s: First, President Trump attempted to remove Fed Governor Lisa Cook, triggering a legal battle that’s still going on. Then Stephen Miran, who had advised the president as chair of the Council of Economic Advisors, was confirmed to the Board of Governors and pushed for a more aggressive 50 basis point rate cut. (He also indicated he preferred to lower the rate by an additional 125 basis points through the end of the year — 50 basis points more than any other Fed official.)

While Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s focus on maximum employment and price stability has kept the central bank grounded throughout the turmoil, investors have taken note of the political clouds.

Of course, there isn’t any one definitive way to measure the impact of political risk on asset prices, but there are hints. For instance, though speculative positioning in dollar futures (DXY) has gotten more bearish throughout the year, there was a decisive increase in bearishness over the summer and in the lead up to the meeting.

 

Speculative US Dollar Future Positioning



 

A New Goldilocks?

Political concerns notwithstanding, the first rate cut in nearly a year was a powerful catalyst for financial markets, igniting a broad-based rally across multiple asset classes. Investors have embraced a “bad news is good news” dynamic, where weakening labor data was viewed as a positive for asset prices because it solidifies the case for further rate cuts. At least for now, other drivers of further rate cuts could include declining consumer demand or shrinking profit margins.

One of the most significant developments was the breakout in small-capitalization stocks. The Russell 2000 index surged to a new all-time high for the first time since November 2021 amid renewed investor confidence in the more cyclical parts of the U.S. economy. (Smaller companies tend to be seen as more sensitive to borrowing costs.)

 

Russell 2000



Sectors levered to the AI trade also had another strong month, and gold prices climbed to new record highs, surpassing $3,800/oz. While both are thought to benefit from lower interest rates, the month’s political turmoil also likely boosted the precious metal’s appeal as a safe-haven hedge against institutional instability and inflation.

Market Recap

 

Asset Returns



 

September 2025 Sector Total Returns



Macro

•  The Federal Reserve lowered its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points to a target range of 4%-4.25%.

•  In their Summary of Economic Projections, Fed officials expected higher GDP growth, lower unemployment, and higher inflation.

•  Against expectations for an increase of 75k jobs in August, only 22k were added. Additionally, the prior two months were revised down by 12k.

•  After the prior month’s surge, August PPI came in below expectations at -0.1% m/m. On the other hand, CPI came in a touch above estimates at 0.4% m/m.

•  Second quarter GDP growth was revised up from 3.3% to 3.8%, driven by higher than initially reported consumer spending.

•  The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index fell to 55.1 in September, below consensus of 62.0, amid worsening perceptions of the job market and their personal financial situation.

•  New home sales surged to an annualized 800k, significantly above consensus for 650k and the most since January 2022.

•  Buoyed by lower interest rates, ETF flows, and ongoing central bank purchases, gold rose 11.9% to finish the month at an all-time high of $3,859. That was its best month since August 2011.

Equities

•  Emerging market stocks rose 7.2%, powered by strong tech sector gains from Taiwan, South Korea, and China.

•  The Magnificent Seven and a basket of AI-sensitive stocks also had a strong month, with gaining 9.3% and 10.2%, respectively.

•  Cyclical stocks beat defensives by 1.1 percentage points, their fifth straight month of outperformance.

Fixed Income

•  Treasurys and Investment Grade corporate bonds have had three straight quarters of positive returns, the first such streak since 2020.

•  Treasury volatility (i.e. the MOVE Index) continued its multi-month declines, now at its lowest level since early January 2022.

View PDF

 
 


Performance data quoted represents past performance. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Market returns will fluctuate, and current performance may be lower or higher than the standardized performance data quoted.

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