Manufacturing is the bright spot, and data centers are a key driver
Manufacturing improved compared with the prior period, with eight districts reporting growth and two reporting declines. Many contacts pointed to increased new orders, and several specifically cited demand tied to data centers and related energy infrastructure. This is a very “Capex led” kind of strength, supportive for industrial activity, but not always enough to lift consumer demand at the same time.
Consumers are more price sensitive, with lower income households pulling back
Consumer spending rose only slightly overall, and two districts reported ongoing declines. The Beige Book notes that sales were dampened by uncertainty, rising price sensitivity, and lower income consumers cutting spending. For FX traders, this is the part that can quickly shift sentiment: A consumer slowdown can hit risk appetite even while parts of the economy still look resilient.

Tariffs are adding cost pressure, but pass through is not guaranteed:
Tariff uncertainty is back as an active input into company pricing decisions, which is a tricky setup when consumers are already sensitive. After the Supreme Court struck down the administration’s earlier global tariffs under IEEPA, the U.S. is now using Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 for a temporary global tariff that is expected to rise to 15% this week. Markets will watch whether businesses absorb higher costs, pass them on, or delay investment.
On the services side, ISM reported the February Services PMI at 56.1, a stronger than expected expansion signal. That kind of services momentum can keep the Fed cautious because services activity often connects to wages and pricing power. With the next FOMC meeting on March 17 and 18, the policy debate is likely to hinge on whether growth stays firm enough to keep rates steady, or whether consumer weakness spreads.
USD market update: The dollar is firm again:
In the FX market, the U.S. dollar has strengthened as risk sentiment stayed fragile and traders reduced expectations for near term easing. The dollar index was around 99.00 on March 5, near a three month high, as safe haven demand rose amid geopolitical stress. This is a typical environment where USD can stay supported even if U.S. growth headlines look mixed, because global uncertainty boosts demand for liquidity.
How Forex and copy traders can turn this into a practical plan
i. USD bullish scenario: Services stay hot, cost pressures stay sticky, risk tone remains defensive
Expect USD strength to persist, especially versus higher beta currencies.
ii. USD mixed scenario: Manufacturing and services hold up, but the consumer deteriorates more clearly
USD can remain firm on safe haven demand, but be ready for sharp reversals if rate cuts get repriced back in.
iii. Volatility trigger: Tariff headlines and energy driven inflation risk
This can move USD through both yield expectations and risk sentiment, which is why position sizing matters more than prediction.
The current U.S. picture is not a single story, it is a blend: manufacturing and services provide resilience, while consumers show more stress and tariffs raise the uncertainty premium.
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