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Weekly Investment Perspective

Markets delivered a mixed performance last week as investors digested improving manufacturing activity, uneven labor data, and another heavy round of corporate earnings. Sector leadership continued to shift beneath the surface, with value‑oriented groups gaining traction while technology stocks—especially software—faced renewed pressure. Mid and Small-caps were the leaders last week, with the S&P 400 Mid Cap and S&P 600 Small Cap indices gaining 4.38% and 3.96%, respectively, while the S&P 500 ended the week modestly lower down -0.1%.

Investment sentiment in technology remained fragile. Software shares extended their slide and are now down nearly 30% since late October (as measured by the IGV software ETF), reflecting mounting concerns that rapidly advancing AI tools could disrupt traditional software business models. Newly introduced AI tools intensified those worries, further weighing on the group. But not all tech faltered—semiconductors showed signs of stabilization later in the week, supported by aggressive capital‑spending plans from cloud providers aiming to meet rising AI‑infrastructure demand.

Outside the tech complex, market breadth was healthier. Banks, industrials, energy, and transportation stocks saw steady inflows. Precious metals remained volatile, with gold rising 5% for the week and silver down 2%. Oil prices fluctuated throughout the week and ultimately settled about 2.5% lower, marking the first weekly decline since December.

Economic data continued to show an economy that is expanding, though unevenly. The ISM manufacturing index surged to 52.6, its strongest level in more than three years (readings above 50 indicate expansion). New orders jumped to 57.1, and the backlog index returned to expansion territory at 51.6, suggesting activity could remain firm as we move further into the first quarter. Still, survey responses highlighted ongoing uncertainty around tariffs and capital‑spending plans.

The services side of the economy also showed resilience. The ISM non‑manufacturing index held at 53.8, supported by strong business activity, which climbed to 57.4. New orders dipped modestly but stayed in expansion territory. The prices‑paid index rose to 66.6, signaling that early‑year inflation pressures, while easing overall, have not fully subsided.

Labor‑market readings were mixed. The December JOLTS job‑openings figure fell to 6.542 million, the lowest since 2020, reflecting continued cooling in labor demand. At the same time, initial jobless claims increased to 231,000, though severe winter storms likely distorted the data. The unemployment rate remains steady at 4.4%, consistent with a job market that is softer but still stable. Economists note that slower population growth is lowering the bar for monthly job gains needed to maintain labor‑market equilibrium.

Consumer dynamics remain split across income groups. One‑year inflation expectations eased sharply from 4.0% to 3.5%, supporting sentiment at the margin. Vehicle sales, however, dropped sharply to 14.85 million annualized pace, down 7.7% from December, as winter storms disrupted activity. Despite this, economists expect auto demand to rebound later in the quarter as interest rates drift lower and tax‑refund season boosts household cash flow. Auto‑loan standards are also expected to ease throughout the year, further supporting demand.

Next week brings several key releases—including retail sales, the delayed January jobs report, and January CPI—that may clarify the trajectory of growth and inflation. Economists expect nonfarm payrolls to rise 80,000 and CPI to increase 0.3%, reflecting seasonal effects and still‑sticky prices, while strong earnings flow and $125 billion in Treasury auctions could add market volatility. With inflation gradually easing and labor conditions stabilizing, the Federal Reserve is still expected to stay on hold until mid‑year, when rate cuts in June and September remain the base case.


2026 The Long View | First Merchants Bank

IndexYTD Total Returns
S&P 500 Index1.36%
Dow Jones Industrial Average 4.35%
NASDAQ Index-0.89%
S&P 400 Mid Cap Index8.61%
S&P 600 Small Cap Index9.79%
Russell 2000 Small Cap Index7.64%
MSCI All Country World ex-USA5.93%
Bloomberg Barclays US Aggregate (TR)0.39%

Returns are through | 2/6/2026


Previous Perspectives

Weekly Investment Perspective May 11, 2021

May 11, 2021
Despite an underwhelming employment report on Friday, U.S. equities edged higher last week driven by continued focus on reopening momentum and rising corporate earnings expectations amid strong first quarter results. For the week, the S&P 500 and Dow Jones gained 1.3% and 2.7% respectively, but the tech heavy Nasdaq Composite fell -1.5% as the rotation out of expensive, high-growth stocks into cyclical stocks leveraged to the economic reopening gained traction

Weekly Investment Perspective May 4, 2021

May 4, 2021
U.S. equity markets broadly moved sideways last week but closed out the month of April with the highest monthly gain since November amid a streak of strong earnings reports and continued signs of a robust U.S. economic recovery powered by stimulus and the vaccine rollout. The S&P 500 gained 5.3% for the month of April, bringing its year-to-date performance to 11.8%, while the Nasdaq Composite and Dow Jones advanced 5.4% and 2.8% for the month, respectively, with tech stocks retaking the lead on strong earnings results.

Weekly Investment Perspective April 27, 2021

April 27, 2021
Despite another strong week of corporate earnings announcements, U.S. equity markets took a pause from their year-to-date surge last week as market participants digested the announcement of President Biden’s proposal to increase the capital gains tax rate for high income households and monitored concerning global trends in Covid-19 cases. The major U.S. equity indices ended the week in the red but recouped most of their losses on Friday following robust economic data including indications of growing demand for the U.S. service sector and a 20% month-over-month increase in new home sales in March. The S&P 500 ended -0.1% lower for the week and the Dow Jones and Nasdaq Composite were down -0.4% and -0.3%, respectively.