USA TODAY US Edition

Indicators out this week offer baseline for Trump

- Matt Krantz @mattkrantz

Smokestack­s, job creation and changes in consumer prices will be top of mind for investors this week — especially as a new presidenti­al administra­tion is set to take office.

Key economic indicators regarding industrial production, employment and inflation will be released starting Tuesday.

These measures in many ways will be the starting-point benchmarks for President-elect Donald Trump as investors gauge the success of Trumponomi­cs years down the road.

Some of the indicators investors will be watching, include:

The Empire State Survey. This is the first economic indicator, due out Tuesday. The index measures the business outlook of manufactur­ers in New York state and is used as a general forecast of business activity. The measure posted a big jump in December indicating business confidence.

But investors should mute expectatio­ns for this week’s reading, according to economists at brokerage firm Nomura, suggesting “hard data on real economic activity were mixed.”

Industrial production. Evidence that manufactur­ing output improved in December is piling up, and a Wednesday reading on industrial production will offer proof. Oil production ticked higher during December along with vehicle and parts production. Boosting U.S. manufactur­ing has been a major focus of the incoming president. Nomura estimates the December reading on industrial production will show a 0.6% increase.

Consumer Price Index. Inflation is expected to be a tepid 0.3% in the upcoming reading due Wednesday, but there could be much more volatility beyond the headline number. Price changes in food are seen as modest, but higher inflation is expected in energy prices. Inflation trends will affect how the Federal Reserve adjusts monetary policy and interest rates.

Initial jobless claims. Trump has been aggressive­ly applauding companies that say they will add U.S. jobs. Thursday, investors will see where the economy was in terms of joblessnes­s at the end of President Obama’s term. Recent jobless claims data show that the market for workers is healthy and layoffs have been “subdued,” Nomura says. Nomura economists warn investors from reading too much into the December number since holiday statistics can be distorted.

Investors, though, this week will have a yardstick with which to measure the success of Donald Trump as president.

Economists at brokerage firm Nomura warn investors from reading too much into December’s jobless claims.

 ?? JUSTIN LANE, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY ?? Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange at the opening bell.
JUSTIN LANE, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange at the opening bell.

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