WARSAW, Nov 7, 2025 — U.S. equity futures are pointing to a modestly positive open as traders digest another day without official labor-market data due to the historic federal shutdown, steady-but-soft crypto prices, and a slight bounce in crude. Here’s everything to know before the bell.
1) Futures at a Glance: Cautious Green
Overnight action suggests Wall Street will try to claw back some of Thursday’s tech-led damage. Contracts tied to the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 edged higher in premarket trade, with volatility gauges easing. Live blogs and futures trackers flagged the tentative recovery following yesterday’s slide. [1]
Why it matters: Positioning into Friday’s session is being set against a backdrop of thin macro data and earnings crosscurrents. Lower implied volatility supports a stabilizing tone, but follow-through will hinge on headlines from Washington and company results. [2]
2) The Macro Big Picture: Longest-Ever Shutdown = Data Void
The federal government shutdown is in its 37th day, now the longest in U.S. history. The standoff has delayed the Labor Department’s Employment Situation reports for both September and October—meaning there is no official nonfarm payrolls release today, despite the usual first-Friday cadence. Markets are leaning on private indicators (ADP, bank and alternative datasets) to gauge hiring. [3]
Market take: The data blackout has dulled some macro-driven swings but also raised uncertainty. Once agencies restart releases, investors may need to rapidly recalibrate growth and policy expectations. [4]
3) Rates & Dollar: Yields Drift, Fed Path in Focus
With no fresh BLS prints, Treasury yields have been taking cues from positioning and prior-day flows; the 10-year sits near the low-4s area after a recent dip. Traders will parse any Fed-speak and high-frequency indicators for clues on the policy path. [5]
4) Oil: Small Bounce After a Bruising Week
Crude prices ticked higher early Friday, though both Brent and WTI remain on track for a second straight weekly loss, pressured by oversupply worries and a softer U.S. demand backdrop. The bounce follows a three-day slide and a notable crude-inventory build. [6]
Why it matters: Cheaper energy can ease headline inflation and support consumers, but sliding oil often signals growth jitters—part of why equities have been choppy. [7]
5) Crypto Check: Bitcoin Holds ~$101K–$102K
Bitcoin is hovering around the $101K–$102K band into the U.S. open after October’s deleveraging. Strategist chatter notes potential upside post-shakeout, but near-term tone remains cautious alongside equities. [8]
6) Earnings to Watch Before the Bell
Despite the macro fog, today’s tape gets catalysts from a broad cross-section of companies due pre-market:
- Constellation Energy (CEG), KKR (KKR), Enbridge (ENB), Duke Energy (DUK), Brookfield (BAM), Telus (TU), Brookfield Infrastructure (BIP), CNH Industrial (CNH), Franklin Resources (BEN), Fluor (FLR), Essent (ESNT), MarketAxess (MKTX) are among names slated to report before the open. [9]
Early mover to note:Peloton (PTON) jumped more than 7% premarket after topping revenue expectations, with management leaning into a turnaround narrative around products and pricing. [10]
7) What Could Move Markets After the Open
- Shutdown headlines: Any credible sign of a deal—or another procedural failure—can whipsaw risk appetite. [11]
- Private labor indicators: With BLS silent, investors are reading across from ADP and alternative datasets; weak-ish signals so far have reinforced a cooling jobs narrative. [12]
- Rates reaction: A further dip in the 10-year may support duration-sensitive tech and housing, while a back-up in yields could renew pressure. [13]
- Energy tape: If crude’s rebound holds, it may lift energy shares but complicate the disinflation story. [14]
8) Trading Lens: Key Themes
- Liquidity over data: With official macro prints missing, company guidance and micro data matter more than usual. Expect stock-specific dispersion around earnings. [15]
- Volatility under the surface: Headline VIX can drift lower on the data void, but single-stock and sector volatility may stay lively on earnings surprises. [16]
- Policy risk premium: The longer the shutdown endures, the greater the risk of nonlinear catch-up moves when data resumes—particularly in rates, USD, and cyclicals. [17]
9) The Bottom Line
Friday’s setup is a tug-of-war: slightly greener futures and an oil bounce vs the heaviest data blackout on record. Watch shutdown developments, pre-market earnings, and the 10-year yield for the market’s next clue. Until the macro lights come back on, micro beats macro.
Sources
Live futures & market color and movers: Barron’s live coverage; Markets Insider premarket dashboard. [18]
Shutdown timeline & impact on data: Washington Post; Reuters; Investopedia explainer; Business Insider on private reports. [19]
Crude prices: Reuters; regional wires summarizing early moves. [20]
Treasury yields: Yahoo Finance (^TNX); Investing.com U.S. 10-year overview. [21]
Crypto levels/strategist view: Economic Times; MarketWatch. [22]
Today’s earnings (pre-market list) & early movers: Nasdaq pre-market roster; Reuters on Peloton. [23]
Editor’s note: U.S. markets open at 9:30 a.m. ET (15:30 CET). With official stats paused, intraday moves may be headline-sensitive and company-specific. Keep an eye on guidance language and any hints on demand, inventories, and margin resilience.
References
1. www.barrons.com, 2. www.barrons.com, 3. www.washingtonpost.com, 4. home.treasury.gov, 5. finance.yahoo.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. m.economictimes.com, 9. www.nasdaq.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. us.plus500.com, 13. www.investing.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.barrons.com, 16. www.barrons.com, 17. home.treasury.gov, 18. www.barrons.com, 19. www.washingtonpost.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. finance.yahoo.com, 22. m.economictimes.com, 23. www.nasdaq.com

