DJIA38904.04 307.06
S&P 5005204.34 57.13
NASDAQ16248.52 199.44
Russell 20002060.10 8.70
German DAX18163.94 -238.49
FTSE 1007911.16 -64.73
CAC 408061.31 -90.24
EuroStoxx 505013.35 -57.20
Nikkei 22538992.08 -781.06
Hang Seng16723.92 -1.18
Shanghai Comp3069.30 -5.66
KOSPI2714.21 -27.79
Bloomberg Comm IDX102.90 0.64
WTI Crude-fut91.17 0.01
Brent Crude-fut86.57 1.15
Natural Gas1.79 0.00
Gasoline-fut2.79 -0.01
Gold-fut2345.40 33.50
Silver-fut27.50 0.46
Platinum-fut940.60 -5.50
Palladium-fut1007.40 -23.60
Copper-fut423.60 1.85
Aluminum-spot1815.00 0.00
Coffee-fut212.50 5.75
Soybeans-fut1185.00 5.00
Wheat-fut567.25 11.00
Bitcoin67976.00 304.00
Ethereum USD3328.10 56.27
Litecoin98.71 0.69
Dogecoin0.18 0.00
EUR/USD1.0862 0.0007
USD/JPY151.72 -0.02
GBP/USD1.2678 0.0016
USD/CHF0.9044 -0.0014
USD IDX104.28 0.08
US 10-Yr TR4.4 0.091
GER 10-Yr TR2.406 0.007
UK 10-Yr TR4.064 -0.005
JAP 10-Yr TR0.771 -0.004
Fed Funds5.5 0
SOFR5.32 0

Latest News

Wealth Enhancement Expands Midwest Footprint with Acquisition of Guidance Wealth 

Direct Investment  + Financial Advisory  + M&As  + Wealth Management  | 

U.S. Consumer Sentiment Holds Steady in October, Inflation Expectations Ease Slightly — Evening Brief – 10.15.25 

U.S. consumer sentiment edged down to 55.0 in October’s preliminary reading, slightly below September’s 55.1 but above the 54.1 consensus estimate, according to data released Friday by the University of Michigan’s Surveys of Consumers. 

The report paints a picture of cautious stability: while consumers remain wary of inflation and softening job prospects, improvements in personal finances and near-term business conditions helped offset declines in longer-term outlooks and durable goods purchasing sentiment. 

“Improvements this month in current personal finances and year-ahead business conditions were offset by declines in expectations for future personal finances as well as current buying conditions for durables,” said Joanne Hsu, Director of the Surveys of Consumers. She added that “high prices and weakening job prospects remain at the forefront of consumers’ minds,” keeping overall sentiment constrained despite incremental gains in some components. 

The current conditions index rose modestly to 61.0, above both the 60.0 consensus and 60.4 in September, reflecting slightly improved perceptions of household finances. Meanwhile, the expectations index eased to 51.2, down from 51.7 in both the prior month and the consensus forecast, suggesting a more cautious forward view. 

On inflation, year-ahead expectations slipped to 4.6% from 4.7% in September—marking a small but encouraging improvement—while five-year inflation expectations held steady at 3.7%. 

Taken together, the data signal that consumers are maintaining a fragile sense of optimism amid mixed economic signals: resilience in spending power and wages on one hand, and ongoing concern about price pressures and employment conditions on the other. 

Economists view the October reading as consistent with a gradual cooling of sentiment rather than a sharp downturn, suggesting households are adjusting expectations as the economy transitions toward slower growth and more normalized inflation. 

Connect

Inside The Story

About Joe Palmisano

Joe Palmisano is Editorial Director for Connect Money, where he brings nearly three decades experience of market insights as a financial journalist, analyst and senior portfolio manager for leading financial publications, advisory firms, and hedge funds. In his role as Editorial Director, Joe is responsible for the selection of content and creation of daily business news covering the financial markets, including Alternative Assets, Direct Investment and Financial Advisory services. Before joining Connect Money, Joe was a financial journalist for the Wall Street Journal, regularly publishing feature stories and trend pieces on the foreign exchange, global fixed income and equity markets. Joe parlayed his experience as a financial journalist into roles as a Senior Research Analyst and Portfolio Manager, writing daily and weekly market analysis and managing a FX and US equity portfolio. Joe was also a contributing writer for industry magazines and publications, including SFO Magazine and the CMT Association. Joe earned a B.S.B.A. in Finance from The American University. He holds the Chartered Market Technician (CMT) designation and is a member of the CFA Institute.