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Money & Cycles Weekly Bulletin

US household cash ratio at six-year low

January 12, 2026 by Simon Ward

        • Broad money holdings of US households fell to the lowest share of their total financial assets since 2019 as equity exposure reached another new record (see charts).
        • US private jobs are barely growing, while a lower-than-expected unemployment number conceals rises in labour force exits and involuntary part-time working (see charts).
        • US productivity is showing signs of acceleration but year-on-year growth is still close to the pre-pandemic 25-year average (see charts).
        • Global services PMI new business echoed a decline in manufacturing new orders, while services employment fell to a 20-month low (see charts).
        • The RMB reached its highest level vs. the basket since Liberation Day (see charts).
        • Japanese wage growth was lower than expected (see charts).
        • Eurozone headline and core consumer prices rose at a sub-2% annualised pace in the latest three months (see charts).

The share of broad money holdings in total financial assets of US households fell to 14.0% in September, the lowest since June 2019:

Chart 1 showing US Household* Broad Money** & Equities Directly & Indirectly Held % of Total Financial Assets *Households & Non-Profit Organisations **Currency + Checkable, Time & Savings Deposits + Money Funds

Equity exposure rose to another new record of 47.1%.

The broad money share reached a similar level before the GFC bear market and corrections in 2015 and 2018.

The share fell below the current level in the late 1990s; however, equity exposure was then significantly lower.

 

US private payrolls barely grew in December, with October / November numbers revised down:

Chart 2 showing US Private Payrolls (mom change, 000s)

The unemployment rate unexpectedly fell back to slightly below its September level but an expanded measure including people not in the labour force but wanting a job rose over the same period:

Chart 3 showing US Unemployment Rates - Actual & Expanded

Involuntary part-time working – a leading indicator – also increased:

Chart 4 showing US Unemployment Rate & Ratio of Involuntarily Part-Time to All Part-Time Workers

The job-finding probability in the New York Fed consumer survey fell to a new low (gold line, inverted):

Chart 5 showing US Consumer Survey Labour Market Weaknes Indicators

 

US productivity (output per hour) is showing signs of acceleration but year-on-year growth is still close to the pre-pandemic 25-year average:

Chart 6 showing US Output per Hour (% yoy)

 

Global services PMI new business echoed a decline in manufacturing new orders, with both series below pre-pandemic averages:

Chart 7 showing Global PMI New Orders / Business

Services employment fell to a 20-month low:

Chart 8 showing Global PMI Employment

As previously noted, however, money trends suggest PMI stabilisation / recovery into Q2:

Chart 9 showing Global Manufacturing PMI New Orders & G7 + E7 Real Narrow Money (% 6m)

An alternative manufacturing indicator based on national surveys is weaker than PMI new orders but moved sideways last month:

Chart 10 showing Global Manufacturing PMI New Orders & G7 + E7 National Business Survey Indicator

 

The RMB reached its highest level vs. the basket since Liberation Day, hinting at a shift in exchange rate policy towards allowing gradual appreciation:

Chart 11 showing China CFETS RMB Index & USDCNY (inverted)

Producer prices have stopped falling, reflecting firmer commodity prices:

Chart 12 showing China Producer Prices (% mom) & NBS Manufacturing PMI Raw Material Prices Index

 

Japanese wage growth was lower than expected, though headline weakness likely reflects bonus timing:

Chart 13 showing Japan Cash Earnings (% yoy)

Still, scheduled annual wage growth of 2.0% is below a level consistent with the 2% inflation target.

 

Eurozone headline and core consumer prices rose at a sub-2% annualised pace in the latest three months:

Chart 14 showing Eurozone Consumer Prices (% 3m annualised)

The German Sentix survey – the first to be released each month – recovered slightly, suggesting a stable / firmer Ifo:

Chart 15 showing Germany Ifo Manufacturing Business Expectations & Sentix / ZEW Economic Expectations* *Fitted Values of Regression of Ifo on Sentix / ZEW (sa)

EAFE growth and quality have recovered slightly since year-end:

Chart 16 showing MSCI EAFE Style Indices Relative to MSCI EAFE, 31 December 2024 = 100

US growth and quality have similarly started the year with minor reversals of 2025 – growth down, quality up:

Chart 17 showing MSCI US Style Indices Relative to MSCI US, 31 December 2024 = 100

NS Partners Ltd.
January 12th, 2026