Below is a copy of the latest Daily Wrap email from Marketplace.
Sign up for the Marketplace Daily Wrap to receive updates directly in your inbox each weekday evening.
Plus: A conversation with a late-night Christmas tree seller. 
We hope you enjoy today's briefing from Marketplace. Subscribe to more Marketplace newsletters here.
Independent journalism, supported by you.
Your support ensures Marketplace can keep covering the issues that matter without paywalls or corporate influence.
DONATE NOW

Who do you believe, me or your lying pocketbooks? That was President Donald Trump’s message to the nation last night in an economic address full of misleading, exaggerated and flat wrong statistics. The President won reelection in part on a promise to lower prices “on day one,” but 11 months in his approval rating on the economy is finding new lows.

We’ll have more on that speech below, plus some news about Trump’s growing personal fortune and an interview with a Christmas tree seller. But first: A bit of good news on prices, with some important context. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
A man passes by a clothing store with many
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
The November CPI report shows cooling inflation, with some key caveats
The data is from peak Black Friday discount season, and it’s missing October because of the shutdown. Marketplace’s Henry Epp breaks it down.

The Consumer Price Index rose 2.7% year-over-year in November, according to data released today by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

That’s closer to the Federal Reserve’s inflation target, and below what most economists expected. So our long national nightmare of fast-rising prices is coming to an end, right?

Not exactly.

“This is not a good guide as to what is going on with inflation,” said Omair Sharif, who leads the firm Inflation Insights.

He said this report is just not giving us the whole picture of consumer prices because thanks to the government shutdown, we’re missing October, so we can’t compare how prices might’ve moved month to month. And then, the data BLS did collect only captured the second half of November. 

“Most people are pretty familiar with the idea that the back half of November, you get a lot of deals and discounts around Black Friday and Cyber Monday and so on,” Sharif said.

That means a lot of the prices the BLS captured were discounted for the holidays. 

“Electronics, appliances, things like that. Some of those things were weak, I think, partly because of this data collection issue,” Sharif said.

No data collection for six weeks may also have skewed another big item in the report: shelter, meaning what we pay to rent or own homes. Yelena Shulyatyeva is senior U.S. economist for the Conference Board. She said those numbers might be too good to be true.

“If you look at the data, you see that shelter prices growth slowed very significantly in November. So for now, let's take that with a grain of salt,” she said.

But pair this inflation report with the delayed November jobs report and you can get a rough idea of what’s going on in this economy, said Ann Owen at Hamilton College.

“Big picture, we're seeing a weakening labor market, maybe inflation that's relatively stable, possibly coming down a little bit, but still above the Fed's 2% target,” she said.

And those two things could be related, according to Owen. If people are pulling back on spending, because the job market is weakening, that could lower inflation. Because there’d be less demand for goods and services. That’s not a sure thing, though. We’ll need data from December to get a better sense. 

 But the problem with waiting is that it leaves us guessing.

“We don't know what we're missing, but that's a big deal, because anytime that you raise uncertainty, you're going to cause people to pause,” said Laura Veldkamp at Columbia Business School.

Uncertainty, she said, can be its own kind of economic drag.



 
News you should know

Let’s do the numbers

  • Caveated though it may be, good inflation news lifted Wall Street’s hopes for interest rate cuts next year, so stocks rose. The S&P 500 closed 0.8% higher, the Dow rose 0.1% and the Nasdaq composite rallied 1.4%.

  • Don’t expect the inflation data issues to go away after this blip, by the way. Experts say the numbers could be skewed for months.

  • The unemployment rate is 4.6% at last check, a four-year high. Economists are predicting the same “low higher, low fire” job market in 2026, at least for the first half of the year.

  • Shares in Trump Media & Technology Group surged 42% today after the President’s social media startup announced a $6 billion merger with a company working on nuclear fusion. If that sounds a bit dodgy to you… well, yeah.

  • Ticker symbol DJT has been a presidential meme stock, swinging wildly on enthusiasm from Trump supporters more than the business fundamentals of Truth Social. Trump is the biggest shareholder, and his stake grew by more than a billion today.

The Trump administration

  • TikTok has reportedly signed a deal, brokered by the White House, to divest its American operations and convert them to a mostly domestic joint venture. The deal is set to close a year after a divest-or-ban law passed in 2024 was supposed to take effect.

  • The government said it’s made $1 billion in tariff revenue from previously exempt small-dollar shipments. Trump closed the so-called de minimis loophole earlier this year.

  • As part of his affordability speech, Trump announced $1,776 checks (get it?) for servicemembers last night. He implied the “warrior dividend” came from tariff revenue, but it’s actually repurposed housing assistance passed by Congress earlier this year.

  • Taxpayers will use a new IRS form 4547 (get it??) to set up tax-advantaged “Trump accounts” for their children. The White House is hitting up wealthy donors for seed money.

  • Finally, Trump is giving federal workers an extra two days off next week, on either side of Christmas. While unusual, there’s some precedent for this.
Take the Marketplace news quiz!
Listen to “Marketplace,” test your knowledge, brag to your friends.
LET'S GO
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"People come up to me all the time. Like, ‘How much are the trees?’ I'm like, would you walk onto a car lot and be like, ‘How much is a car?’ It really depends on what you're looking for, you know."
—  June Hagin, who works nights at a Christmas tree lot in New York City

Every year, as the air turns cold, seasonal workers flock to New York City street corners to help spread a little bit of holiday cheer in the form of firs and frasers.

These operations seem to pop up overnight and are often open around the clock, serving New Yorkers at whatever hour they’re free to buy a Christmas tree. We talked with one of those seasonal workers, who quit a line cook job to work the night watch. It pays $5,000 with housing included — not bad, if you can handle the cold.

A tote bag reading

We've come a long way together, but there’s still much work to be done. In 2026, Marketplace is preparing to meet the moment and shape the conversation. Will you join us?
GIVE NOW
Final note
What happens when AI runs your office vending machine

The Wall Street Journal agreed to stress test Anthropic’s artificial intelligence agent built for running a vending machine. The first of its kind, “Claudius” was supposed to respond to employee requests, order products and haggle over prices with profit in mind.

Instead, Journal reporters easily tricked the bot-trepreneur into giving away snacks and stocking live fish. Hundreds of dollars in the red, the robocapitalist decided to splash out for a Playstation 5. Anthropic was surprisingly chill about all this, saying the experience would help them improve the vending machines of the future.

Watch the whole saga on YouTube, and if you’re wondering “why Claudius?” revisit our piece on how tech companies choose a name for their AI bots.
 
Thanks for reading! If you enjoyed this newsletter, forward it to a friend. If this newsletter was forwarded to you, subscribe to Marketplace newsletters here.

 Got feedback for us? Just reply to this email. We can't get back to everyone, but we read it all.
Terms of use | Your privacy rights | Contact Us | Donate

© 2025 American Public Media Group. All rights reserved.

Terms of use | Your privacy rights | Contact Us

© 2025 American Public Media Group. All rights reserved.