Daily market snapshot

Published February 10, 2026
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Tuesday, 2/10/2026 p.m.

  • Stocks trade lower following slowdown in consumer spending – U.S. equity markets were mostly lower on Tuesday as investors digested the December retail-sales report, which showed retail-sales growth was flat for the month, compared with expectations for a 0.4% increase.* While equities declined, bonds rallied on the slowing consumer spending report, with the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield falling to 4.14% and the 2-year yield to 3.45%.* Declining yields supported interest-rate-sensitive sectors of the S&P 500, such as real estate and utilities.* Technology and communication services, as well as financials, trailed, with the latter weighed down by brokerage stocks, which were pressured by mounting worries about AI‑related competitive pressures.* Overseas, Asian markets finished higher overnight, while European markets closed mostly lower.*
     
  • Consumer spending stalled at the end of 2025 – Headline retail-sales growth was flat in December versus expectations for a monthly gain of 0.4%.* Additionally, control group retail sales (which exclude spending on autos, gas stations, and building materials) fell by 0.1% for the month, compared with expectations for a 0.4% gain.* The slowdown in spending was broad-based, with weakness notable in furniture and home furnishings stores (-0.9%), miscellaneous store retailers (-0.9%), and clothing and clothing accessories stores (-0.7%), while spending on building materials was a bright spot (+1.2%).* Despite a lackluster handoff to 2026, we expect steady consumption growth to support healthy economic momentum this year. In our view, larger refund checks stemming from tax legislation passed in 2025 should provide a modest boost to household spending power. Additionally, a cooling but stable labor market and easing monetary policy could offer further support, with our base-case calling for real GDP growth of roughly 2% in 2026.
     
  • Busy week of economic data ahead – Key economic data will likely remain in focus for investors over the remainder of the week, with tomorrow bringing the January employment report and Friday the consumer price index (CPI) inflation release.* On the labor‑market front, economists expect nonfarm payrolls to rise by 75,000 and the unemployment rate to hold steady at 4.4%.* In 2025, job growth slowed to an average monthly gain of 49,000, down from 168,000 in 2024.* Despite the deceleration in hiring, there have been limited signs of increased layoffs, with the unemployment rate holding at 4.4% and initial jobless claims remaining well below their long‑run average.* Turning to inflation, expectations call for both headline and core CPI to rise by 2.5% year‑over‑year, which—if realized—would mark the lowest annual core CPI reading since March 2021.* With inflation continuing to moderate and job growth slowing, we expect the Fed to deliver another one or two interest‑rate cuts in 2026.

Brock Weimer, CFA;
Investment Strategy

Source: *FactSet 

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