Markets in the Dark
As the U.S. government shutdown stretches on, Wall Street finds itself navigating uncharted territory. With agencies like the Bureau of Labor Statistics and Census Bureau shuttered, key economic data – including jobs, inflation, and GDP figures, has stopped flowing. Yet, paradoxically, stocks are climbing.
The S&P 500 has risen nearly 2% since the shutdown began, even as investors lose access to the information that normally guides their decisions. In a market increasingly fueled by data, traders are now relying on instinct, sentiment, and what some call “wishful thinking.”
“It’s as if the less we know, the better we feel,” said Michael Arone, chief investment strategist at State Street Global Advisors. “Without numbers to challenge the narrative, optimism fills the gap.”
The Disappearing Dashboard
The impact of the shutdown on the data ecosystem has been severe. Employment reports, inflation metrics, and consumer spending data, all vital indicators for market strategy, have been postponed indefinitely.
“The government is effectively turning off the headlights while we’re driving at full speed,” said Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY-Parthenon. “Investors don’t realize how dependent they are on consistent visibility until it’s gone.”
Even the Federal Reserve, which relies heavily on this data to set interest rates, has been forced to work with incomplete information. Without those numbers, the central bank’s next policy move becomes harder to predict, a reality that typically rattles markets. But not this time.
A Rally Built on Ignorance
Instead of pulling back, investors are leaning in. Analysts say that, without fresh reports to confirm or contradict market expectations, traders are more comfortable maintaining their bullish outlooks.
“Markets are trading on narrative, not numbers,” said Lori Calvasina, head of U.S. equity strategy at RBC Capital Markets. “When there’s no data to dissect, it’s easier for everyone to agree the outlook is fine.”
Private data firms like ADP and S&P Global have stepped in to offer partial insights, but those reports don’t carry the same credibility or reach. For many investors, no news simply means no bad news, and that’s been enough to sustain a rally.
The Fed’s Blind Spot
The Federal Reserve’s policy decisions depend on high-quality government data, particularly around employment and inflation. But with those inputs frozen, analysts warn that rate-setting could become guesswork.
“If the Fed cuts or holds based on incomplete information, it risks either undershooting inflation or over-tightening into weakness,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at KPMG. “The longer this goes on, the greater the policy uncertainty.”
Still, the market doesn’t seem to mind. Futures contracts imply two to three rate cuts by mid-2026, a sign investors are betting on a softer economy, whether or not the data confirms it.
Private Metrics Take the Stage
In the absence of federal data, private-sector reports have taken center stage. Analysts now turn to credit card transaction data, corporate earnings, and even Google Trends to gauge real-time economic momentum.
“It’s a world built on proxies,” said Arone. “When official data vanishes, people will find creative ways to replace it, even if it’s not perfect.”
Alternative data providers have seen a spike in demand as hedge funds and institutional traders scramble to fill the information void. The quality varies, but the appetite is clear: investors can’t stop trading just because Washington has.
Volatility Hides Beneath the Calm
While equities appear stable, many analysts believe this calm won’t last. Once the data pipeline reopens, the reality of slower job growth or sticky inflation could shock markets.
“This is the quiet before the storm,” said Subadra Rajappa, head of U.S. rates strategy at Société Générale. “When investors finally see the backlog of data, they might wish they hadn’t.”
Bond markets already show hints of nervousness. Treasury yields have fallen as traders hedge against a potential economic surprise, even while the Dow and Nasdaq hold firm.
A Comfortable Illusion
The longer the shutdown continues, the more investors seem to accept, even enjoy, the lack of information. With no surprises, no revisions, and no new warnings, the market narrative remains unchallenged.
“It’s a behavioral phenomenon,” said Calvasina. “People feel safer when they can’t see the risks. But that safety is an illusion.”
For now, traders are content to stay in the dark. The irony is clear: in a world obsessed with data, the absence of it has become the new form of confidence.