A Field Guide to This Platform
MacroImpactIQ isn't a data terminal or a news aggregator. It's an interpretation layer. Here's how to get the most out of every section.
Most economic data platforms show you numbers. MacroImpactIQ answers the question that actually matters: what do these numbers mean for you?
Raw indicators — a 4.1% unemployment rate, 2.8% Core PCE, a 5.33% fed funds rate — are just inputs. The value is in understanding how they interact, what the combination signals about the current moment, and how that moment transmits into real-world consequences for households, businesses, and financial markets.
The platform is structured as a descent from high-level context down to specific risk:
The opening section gives you three things immediately:
The regime bar gives you a snapshot of five key macro metrics alongside the overall regime classification and stress index. Think of it as your instrument panel.
| Metric | What It Shows | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Current Macro Regime | Where we are in the business cycle — Early, Mid, Late Cycle, Stress Buildup, Contraction, or Recovery | Composite analysis |
| Fed Funds | The Federal Reserve's benchmark interest rate. High rates = expensive borrowing across the entire economy | Federal Reserve |
| Core PCE | The Fed's preferred inflation measure, excluding food and energy. Above 2% means the Fed is unlikely to cut rates | BEA / FRED |
| Unemployment | The percentage of the labor force actively seeking work. Low = tight labor market. Rising = economic softening | BLS / FRED |
| Real GDP | Economic output adjusted for inflation. The broadest measure of economic growth or contraction | BEA / FRED |
| Sentiment | University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index. Tracks how consumers feel about their financial situation and the economy | Univ. of Michigan |
The Composite Stress Index (0–100) aggregates credit conditions, household financial health, labor market indicators, and monetary policy tightness into a single reading. It is designed to surface stress before it becomes visible in headline GDP or unemployment numbers.
The "What the numbers actually mean" and "Supporting indicators" sections translate raw data points into interpreted signals. Each card follows the same structure:
The "ⓘ" button on each supporting indicator card opens a detailed modal with the indicator's definition, current reading, market impact, and business impact. Click it when a metric is unfamiliar or when you want to understand the full transmission chain.
The sector grid maps macro pressure to the six parts of the economy most directly affected. Each tile shows the sector's current stress level and a brief summary of what's driving it.
Click any tile to get a deeper summary of current conditions in that sector. The sidebar links highlight the same sectors — clicking a sidebar sector link scrolls to the grid and briefly highlights the relevant tile.
This is one of the most distinctive sections on the platform, and one of the most valuable. It surfaces cases where two indicators that "should" agree are pointing in opposite directions.
Why contradictions matter: Most macro analysis works by looking at indicators in sequence. But the most dangerous moments in the economic cycle are when the data gives mixed signals — when employment looks fine but credit stress is building, or when consumer sentiment is falling while spending data is still positive.
Contradictions are often where regime shifts begin. The data disagrees with itself precisely because the old trend hasn't fully broken down yet while the new one is already forming. These gaps are the early warning system.
Every status indicator on the platform uses the same color system, consistently applied:
| Composite Stress Index Score | Label | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| 0 – 25 | Stable | System-level stress is low. Typical of mid-cycle or recovery phases. |
| 26 – 50 | Moderate | Some indicators are elevated. Bears monitoring but not yet alarming. |
| 51 – 70 | Elevated | Multiple indicators flashing. Stress is building across the system. |
| 71 – 85 | High | System is under significant strain. Late-cycle warning territory. |
| 86 – 100 | Critical | Acute system-level stress. Pre-crisis or crisis conditions. |