US business inventories rose by 0.1% in November, below the 0.2% forecast.
The figure points to slower stock building by firms during the month. It follows earlier inventory increases and may affect near-term production plans.
Implications For Orders And Growth
A lower inventory gain can change how companies place new orders and manage supply. It can also feed into estimates for quarterly economic growth.
That report from back in November 2025, showing business inventories at 0.1%, was an early signal of caution. It suggested that businesses were seeing weaker demand than expected and were hesitant to build up stock. We now see this as the beginning of a cooling trend that has continued into the new year.
This trend was confirmed by last week’s data, which showed January 2026 retail sales falling by 0.4%, missing expectations for a flat reading. This confirms that the inventory caution from late last year was warranted as consumer demand is softening. The market is now actively pricing in a higher chance of an economic slowdown over the next quarter.
For the coming weeks, we are positioning defensively by purchasing put options on broad market indices like the SPX. This strategy offers protection against a potential market decline driven by weaker corporate earnings guidance. We are also buying puts on consumer discretionary ETFs, as these companies are most exposed to a pullback in spending.
Rates Volatility And Hedging Positioning
The slowing economic data also changes the outlook for interest rates, making a Federal Reserve rate cut later this year more likely. We are therefore buying call options on 2-year and 10-year Treasury note futures. This position will benefit as bond prices rise in anticipation of a more accommodative Fed policy stance.
Historically, we’ve seen similar patterns where inventory drawdowns precede a rise in market volatility. The slowdown in 2019 showed a similar trend before the VIX began a steady climb from its lows. Consequently, adding some long volatility exposure through options on the VIX index could be a prudent hedge for the next few weeks.