Macroeconomic data dashboard for investors

Analysis

Macroeconomic data

GDP, inflation, employment, and market indicators — macro context for valuation and portfolio decisions.

Macroeconomic data

Economic dashboard

A centralized view of key macro series is coming soon. We'll surface the indicators that matter most for valuation and portfolio context.

Coming soon — data feeds and charts are under development

GDP & growth

Real GDP, quarterly growth rates, and recession indicators.

Inflation & rates

CPI, core PCE, Fed funds, and yield curve snapshots.

Employment

Unemployment, payrolls, and labor force participation.

Market indicators

Credit spreads, dollar index, and risk-on / risk-off gauges.

More analysis tools

Frequently asked questions

Which macroeconomic indicators matter most for stock investors?
Investors commonly watch GDP growth, inflation (CPI/PCE), Federal Reserve policy rates, Treasury yields, unemployment, and credit spreads. Together they influence earnings expectations and the discount rate applied in valuation models.
How does inflation affect stock valuations?
Higher inflation often leads to higher interest rates, which raise discount rates in DCF models and can compress valuation multiples — especially for long-duration growth stocks.
Will this dashboard include historical charts?
Yes. The macro dashboard will provide historical time series for major U.S. economic indicators with investor-focused context and links to related analysis tools.

Why macroeconomic data matters for stock analysis

Macro conditions shape discount rates, earnings multiples, and sector rotation. When inflation rises, discount rates often follow. When growth slows, cyclical earnings compress. A macro dashboard helps you interpret whether headwinds or tailwinds are building before you run a DCF or size a position.

StockSpill is building a consolidated macro view: real GDP and growth rates, CPI and core inflation, Federal Reserve policy rates, labor market statistics, and market-based indicators like credit spreads and the U.S. dollar index.

Use this page alongside our DCF calculator — higher Treasury yields and inflation expectations often justify higher discount rates — and our smart-money datasets to see whether superinvestors and insiders are positioning for the same macro regime you observe in the data.

Key takeaways

  • Macro indicators inform discount rates used in DCF models.
  • Inflation and Fed policy affect equity multiples and sector leadership.
  • Live data feeds and charts are rolling out on this dashboard.