Good morning, investors. It’s Friday, and the still-closed government will release the latest inflation data. The Fed probably won’t change course no matter the results, but stocks certainly appear ready to capitalize.
Repeat patterns
The S&P 500 is once again within reach of a record high and the latest inflation report could be just the thing to push it over the top.
The index secured new all-time highs following the CPI releases in September, June, and May — three of the last five inflation announcements — and bullish momentum has only grown since then.

Indeed, stocks climbed across the board on Thursday, recouping losses from earlier in the week and building on a series of strong earnings results.
Economists expect the report to show September’s headline and core CPI at 3.1% year-over-year, roughly in line with the prior month, according to FactSet.

What’s unique about this release, of course, is that the government remains shut down.
Markets have largely marched higher in the absence of economic data, though the White House deemed this report important enough to call back furloughed workers to make sure it published.
(It was originally slated to publish on October 15.)
The release will have “more than the usual fawning over the numbers given the ongoing government shutdown and data vacuum it has created,” David Cervantes of Pinebrook Capital wrote in a note Wednesday.
“Expect extrapolations to be magnified beyond import, and for the cope to be at max levels.”
While Cervantes may be correct about reactions from pundits and market participants, the data is unlikely to change the outlook for the Federal Reserve.
Prediction markets and traditional indicators all effectively guarantee quarter-point rate cuts next week and in December.
Since the last central bank meeting in September, several policymakers have voiced a willingness to lower borrowing costs to support the labor market.
Even with another cut here or there, according to Fed President Susan Collins, “monetary policy would remain mildly restrictive, which is appropriate.”
“The labor market has demonstrated pretty significant downside risks,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in recent remarks.
With minimal chance the inflation data derails rate cuts, it seems unlikely markets will react any other way other than optimistically, even if the headline number shows a surprise.
Market snapshot

Elsewhere
🪙 President Trump pardoned Binance founder Changpeng Zhao. He reportedly signed the order Wednesday, and he’s recently indicated that he was sympathetic to arguments of political persecution related to Zhao. (TechCrunch)
🎯 Target will cut about 1,000 global jobs. The retailer will also eliminate 800 available roles, and together the moves will cut about 8% of corporate openings. The stock ticked higher following news of Target’s first major layoff in a decade. (WSJ)
🚀 The AI boom is at a key inflection point. The market has rewarded tech companies’ massive spending plans so far, yet spending booms have historically resulted in over-investment and weaker stock returns. (Sparkline Capital)
🎙 Join 20K+ investors at the Finimize Modern Investor Summit (Dec 2–3) to explore AI, Big Tech, digital assets, and investing, with Cathie Wood and Chris Hughes leading the conversation on the future of wealth. Learn more.
Rapid-fire
Intel stock jumped after beating Wall Street expectations on Q3 earnings (Yahoo Finance)
The Commerce Department denied being in talks for stakes in quantum computing companies (CNBC)
Quantum stocks remained elevated despite government’s denial of interest (CNBC)
Meta stock climbed for a fifth consecutive day following job cuts (WSJ)
Super Micro stock fell 9% after cutting its fiscal first-quarter revenue outlook (Investopedia)
Mortgage rates fell to the lowest level in a year (Yahoo Finance)
The national debt just hit a new record high and our children will foot the bill (Pomp Letter)
Credit card spending across six of the largest issuers rose 7.5% in the third quarter compared to a year ago (WSJ)
Anthropic and Google announced a massive cloud partnership (CNBC)
NBA coach Chauncey Billups and other figures around the league were arrested for ties to a Mafia gambling ring (CNBC)
Interview
I sat down with Bitcoin IRA co-founder Chris Kline to discuss why he expects bitcoin to hit $180,000 in the next 9 weeks, the government shutdown, tax-free crypto, retiring on bitcoin, and more.
On this day
🗓 October 24, 1929: Stocks tumbled on what became known as “Black Thursday”, with panic selling overwhelming trading floors as the largest bubble in generations began to pop.
Last thing
Health Care sector has erased its entire Liberation Day decline
— #Kevin Gordon (#@KevRGordon)
11:45 AM • Oct 23, 2025
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About me
📰 I’m Phil Rosen, co-founder and editor-in-chief of Opening Bell Daily. I’ve published books, lived on three continents, and won awards for my journalism, which has appeared in Business Insider, Fortune, Yahoo Finance, Bloomberg and Inc. Magazine.
I write our flagship newsletter to prepare you for each trading day — unpacking markets, economic data and Wall Street with analysis you won’t find anywhere else.
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