Daily market snapshot

Published February 2, 2026
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Monday, 2/2/2026 a.m.

  • Partial government shutdown in effect – A partial government shutdown took effect Saturday morning, as funding bills for six federal agencies have yet to be signed into law.** The Senate passed a bipartisan bill Friday night to fund five of the six agencies for the full year, while extending funding for the Department of Homeland Security for two weeks to allow for further negotiations.** However, the bill will still need approval by the House of Representatives, which could vote on the bill as soon as today.** U.S. equity markets are taking the news in stride, with all three major averages trading higher on Monday, supported by a better-than-expected ISM Manufacturing PMI reading for January.* The upbeat PMI reading is also putting modest upward pressure on bond yields, with the 10-year Treasury yield opening the day around 4.27% while the ICE U.S. dollar index is advancing by roughly 0.4%.*

    The shutdown will create temporary disruptions across the affected agencies, with some federal employees furloughed for the duration of the shutdown. However, furloughed workers will receive back pay once funding resumes, thanks to the Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019. Importantly, a shutdown does not affect the government’s ability to service its debt, and Social Security payments will continue. A unique aspect of the current shutdown is that it is occurring at the start of tax season, which could delay return processing and refunds—an area of particular focus for 2026, as household refunds are expected to rise due to tax legislation passed in 2025.*** Additionally, a prolonged shutdown could delay key economic releases—such as labor-market and inflation reports—as they were last fall.

    While disruptive, the effects of government shutdowns are typically temporary. During the most recent shutdown, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that the lapse reduced fourth-quarter real GDP growth by roughly 1.5 percentage points, though it also projected that activity would rebound in subsequent quarters as federal spending resumes and employees receive back pay.*** While there are no guarantees in Washington, early reports suggest the funding bill passed by the Senate on Friday could move quickly through the House, helping to avert another prolonged shutdown and limiting the economic impact, in our view.
     
  • Market and economic impact of government shutdowns – Unfortunately, government shutdowns have become far too common, with three occurring over the past decade and 21 since 1976.** While shutdowns can create temporary disruptions, financial markets have tended to look through them. During the most recent shutdown—the longest on record at 43 days—the S&P 500 rose 2%, the 10-year Treasury yield was little changed (rising from 4.1% to 4.14%), and the U.S. dollar index increased by about 0.7%.* From an economic perspective, shutdowns tend to slow activity during the funding lapse, followed by a rebound in subsequent months. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the 2025 shutdown reduced fourth-quarter annualized GDP growth by roughly 1.5 percentage points; however, a recent string of strong economic data suggests fourth-quarter growth remained robust, with the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow tracker indicating growth of more than 4%.*
     
  • Action for investors – The partial government shutdown does not alter our outlook for markets or the economy over the coming year. We continue to believe that a healthy global macroeconomic backdrop creates an attractive environment for stocks, and we maintain our overweight recommendation to equities relative to bonds. Within equities, we find U.S. large- and mid-cap stocks particularly attractive, supported by strong AI-related investment trends and resilient economic activity. In our view, the U.S. economy is also likely to receive incremental support from last year’s tax legislation during the first half of the year. Internationally, we view developed small- and mid-cap stocks and emerging-market equities as attractive opportunities as well. These segments may benefit from steady global growth and strong equity-market momentum in technology-heavy emerging-market regions, including Korea and China. From a planning perspective, because we expect the shutdown to be short-lived, we don't anticipate meaningful financial-planning implications.

Brock Weimer, CFA;
Investment Strategy

Source: *FactSet **Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget ***Congressional Budget Office

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