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Kiplinger
Kiplinger
Business
Karee Venema

What to Look Out for in Economic Data This Week (Jan. 5-Jan. 9)

(Image credit: Getty Images)

The timing of economic data is getting back to normal after the longest government shutdown in U.S. history, and Wall Street will be looking at Friday morning's release of the December jobs report for information about the health of the employment market.

Economic reports we're watching

Thursday, January 8: Weekly jobless claims: It's an even noisier set during the holidays, but reliable data should flow later this month.

Friday, January 9: Nonfarm payrolls report: Data collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics is incoming on a timely basis again.

Friday, January 9: University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment (preliminary): Consumers say they're feeling one way. Their behavior says something else.

Read on to see the entire weekly economic calendar of the most important upcoming economic reports scheduled to be released in the next several days.

Please check back often. This economic calendar is updated regularly. Bolded reports are those considered more noteworthy. All reporting times are in Eastern Time.

Reports that have been delayed due to the government shutdown are marked with an asterisk (*).

Monday (1/5)

Noteworthy economic reports

Time released

Economic report

Period

10 am

Institute for Supply Management (ISM) Manufacturing PMI

December

Tuesday (1/6)

Noteworthy economic reports

Time released

Economic report

Period

8 am

Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin speaks

N/A

9:45 am

S&P Global Final Services PMI

December

Wednesday (1/7)

Noteworthy economic reports

Time released

Economic report

Period

8:30 am

ADP National Employment Report

December

10 am

ISM Services PMI

December

10 am

Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS)

November

10 am

Factory orders

October

4:10 pm

Fed Governor Michelle Bowman speaks

N/A

Thursday (1/8)

Time released

Economic report

Period

8:30 am

Weekly jobless claims

Week ending January 3

8:30 am

U.S. trade balance

October

8:30 am

U.S. productivity

Q3

Friday (1/9)

December nonfarm payrolls report is on time

Investors, traders and speculators will enjoy a timely nonfarm payrolls report for December after the longest-ever U.S. government shutdown delayed release of September, October and November data.

Indeed, it's the "marquee release" on the economic calendar, as BMO Capital Markets economists Michael Gregory and Shelly Kaushik note. Gregory and Kaushik expect "sluggish results," including approximately 50,000 new jobs and an unemployment rate steady at 4.6%.

"Growth remains comfortably above long-run potential," their colleague Sal Guatieri observes, "which begs the question: why is the jobless rate creeping higher?" It's the productivity, as Guatieri explains.

"The direction of the economy and labor market in 2026 will largely depend on productivity and AI's influence on it," he adds. "A faster AI payoff would be good for overall growth and even inflation, but could come at the expense of continued anemic hiring. This mix would at least help keep the Fed in the easing game."

Time released

Economic report

Period

8:30 am

Nonfarm payrolls report

December

8:30 am

Housing starts

October

8:30 am

Building permits

October

10 am

University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index (preliminary)

January

1:35 pm

Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin speaks

N/A

Reporting schedules are provided Forex Factory and MarketWatch.

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