Tom Essaye: Spending Deal Progress Could Lift Markets

Political gridlock risks adding pressure to equities


As the Government Shutdown Begin, Stocks Drop

Tom Essaye, founder of Sevens Report, added that any sign of progress toward a spending deal could spark a relief rally. Conversely, rising political friction that drags out the stalemate would likely trigger more downside pressure on risk assets.

Also, click here to view the full article published in Tradealgo.com on October 1st, 2025. However, to see the Sevens Report’s full comments on the current market environment sign up here.


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Tom Essaye: Spending Deal Could Spark Relief Rally

Shutdown tensions risk further losses in equities


Stocks Gain on Rate-Cut Bets; Drug Shares Extend Gains

To Tom Essaye, founder and president of Sevens Report, any signs of progress toward some sort of spending agreement in Congress would likely spark a relief rally, while rising political tensions that prolong the shutdown would likely prompt further losses in risk assets.

Also, click here to view the full article published in Bloomberg on October 1st, 2025. However, to see the Sevens Report’s full comments on the current market environment sign up here.


If you want research that comes with no long term commitment, yet provides independent, value added, plain English analysis of complex macro topics, then begin your Sevens Report subscription today by clicking here.

To strengthen your market knowledge take a free trial of The Sevens Report.


Join hundreds of advisors from huge brokerage firms like Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Wells Fargo Advisors, Raymond James, and more! To start your quarterly subscription and see how The Sevens Report can help you grow your business, click here.

When We’ll Know If the Labor Market Is a Problem

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • When We’ll Know If the Labor Market Is a Problem
  • What the Negative ADP Jobs Report Means for Markets

Futures are marginally higher following a mostly quiet night of news.

Politically, there are reports of back-channel negotiations occurring to end the government shutdown and a prolonged shutdown is not expected, although no resolution is imminent (and that’s still ok from a market standpoint).

Economically, Eurozone Unemployment slightly missed estimates (6.3% vs. (E) 6.2%).

Today there will be no jobless claims because of the shutdown so the key economic reports will be Challenger Job Cuts (E: 86k) and Factory Orders (E: 1.4%) while we also have one Fed speakers, Logan (10:30 a.m. ET).  Given yesterday’s negative ADP report, a spike in Challenger layoffs will create additional anxiety about the labor market (and possibly weigh on stocks more than ADP did initially on Wednesday).

 

What the Government Shutdown Means for Markets

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • What the Government Shutdown Means for Markets
  • JOLTS & Case Shiller HPI Takeaways

Markets are trading with a risk-off tone this morning as stock futures are lower, bonds are steady and gold broke out to record highs above $3,900 after the government shutdown for the first time since 2018 at midnight.

Economically, the final Eurozone Manufacturing PMI for September edged up to 49.8 vs. (E) 49.5 while the EU’s Core CPI Flash met estimates at 2.3% y/y but the data is not materially impacting markets with the government shutdown news dominating headlines.

While the implications of the government shutdown will remain top of news, there are multiple important economic reports today including the ADP Employment Report (E: 50K), ISM Manufacturing PMI (E: 49.0), and Construction Spending (E: -0.1%). There is also one Fed official scheduled to speak: Barkin (12:15 p.m. ET).

Some late season earnings to watch include reports from CAG ($0.33) and RPM ($1.87), however, the government shutdown is likely to continue to dominate the newswires today so any signs of progress towards some sort of spending agreement in Congress would likely spark a relief rally while rising political tensions that could prolong the shutdown could prompt further losses in risk assets.