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Fed Still Navigating ’Data Fog’ From Shutdown - And Markets Are Paying the Price

Fed Still Navigating ’Data Fog’ From Shutdown - And Markets Are Paying the Price

Published:
2026-01-22 22:57:55
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The Federal Reserve's crystal ball just got cloudier. Washington's political theater—another government shutdown—left policymakers flying blind, scrambling to make trillion-dollar decisions with yesterday's data.

When the Lights Go Out in Washington

Shutdowns don't just furlough workers; they freeze the economic dashboard. Key reports on employment, inflation, and consumer spending vanish. The Fed's rate-setting committee, tasked with steering the world's largest economy, suddenly loses its instruments. They're forced to rely on patchy private-sector data, anecdotal evidence, and a hefty dose of guesswork.

The Ripple Effect on Main Street and Wall Street

This isn't just a bureaucratic headache. Uncertainty from the Fed translates directly to market volatility. Businesses delay investments, unsure of the borrowing cost outlook. Traders swing between panic and euphoria with every vague Fed utterance. It's monetary policy conducted with a blindfold on—hardly reassuring for your 401(k).

A Cynical Take on Modern Finance

Meanwhile, the very institutions that preach 'transparency' and 'data-dependent policy' are repeatedly hamstrung by the same political circus they're supposed to rise above. It's almost as if the system is designed for volatility, not stability—but that's a story for another earnings call.

The fog will eventually lift, the data will trickle in, and the Fed will claim it had everything under control all along. But the real lesson? In today's economy, the most critical data point might just be the calendar—marking the days until the next political standoff threatens to pull the plug again.

Key Takeaways

  • The government shutdown in October and November isn't done messing with the economy: key government reports are still delayed and distorted.
  • A key monthly inflation gauge, Personal Consumption Expenditures, will be a month behind until April, and other data have been skewed by the inability to carry out surveys in October.
  • The lack of up-to-date inflation data could make Federal Reserve officials hesitant to adjust interest rates in the months ahead, economists said.

The 43-day government shutdown may feel like ancient history, but it's still fouling up key economic data.

The government's official reports on inflation have been both delayed and distorted by the shutdown that spanned October and part of November. That's complicating the job of Federal Reserve officials who meet next week to set the nation's monetary policy.

Thursday's report on Personal Consumption Expenditures inflation, which normally covers December, instead covered only October and November, as the Bureau of Economic Analysis played catch-up. Monthly PCE reports won't get back to their regular schedule until April.

The other major inflation report, the Consumer Price Index, was also affected. The Bureau of Labor Statistics skipped gathering October data entirely, since the agency could not carry out the surveys it uses to make the report. The agency also collected prices later in November than it normally would, leading some economists to speculate that holiday sales may have distorted the data.

What This Means For The Economy

The lack of up-to-date data makes it harder to know the true rate of inflation, raising the chances that investors and policymakers will be caught off guard when the government reports finally catch up.

The belated and potentially skewed data is one reason Fed officials are widely expected to hold the central bank's interest rate steady next week, rather than cutting it for a fourth meeting in a row.

Policymakers are torn between keeping the key federal funds rate higher for longer to fight inflation and cutting it to bolster the faltering job market. The Fed relies on economic data to decide whether price hikes or unemployment poses the greater threat to its dual mandate to keep inflation stable and employment high. The central bank may wait for better data before making any moves.

"Fed officials are likely to want to see several more months of data in order to get a clearer understanding of the underlying trends," BRETT Ryan, senior economist at Deutsche Bank, wrote in a commentary.

The effects of the shutdown could persist for months to come because of how they've impacted measures of housing costs in particular, economists said. The BLS was forced to use guesswork to estimate how rent and home ownership costs changed in October. That could affect the data until April, when the bureau is scheduled to survey the homes it skipped in October, economists at Goldman Sachs led by Jessica Rindels wrote in a commentary.

"A methodological feature to assume no inflation in October—when data could not be collected—led shelter inflation to be understated across October and November in the prior report," Rindels wrote. "We do not expect an unwind until April 2026, when the units that were supposed to be surveyed in October are sampled again."

Related Education

Inflation: What It Is and How to Control Inflation Rates

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Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS): What It Is and How It Works

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics building

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics building

Because housing costs are such a big part of household budgets as well as inflation calculations, the snafu could be making inflation seem much lower than it actually is, at least temporarily, wrote Omair Sharif, founder and president of Inflation Insights, in a posted on social media last week.

Annual "core" inflation seemed to cool off considerably over the last three months, with prices rising only 2.6% over the year in December, according to the CPI, down from 3% in September. But if Sharif is correct, that could be a mirage.

"Given distortions in the data, including with respect to rent/OER, Core inflation is likely still closer to 3% than 2.5%," Sharif wrote.

In other words, the data "blackout" that Fed officials lamented during the shutdown has brightened up a bit, but not completely.

"Noisy inflation data due to the government shutdown have likely made it difficult for policymakers to gauge the underlying trend of inflation," David Seif, chief economist at Nomura, wrote in a commentary.

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