2026-01-23 TACO Pressure Index Update: Low at 22.93

The index is designed to approximate how market stress can build pressure for a softer policy posture. On 2026-01-23, the score printed 22.93/100 in the low regime, with inflation expectations and front-end rate pressure doing most of the work.

Composite score22.93
RegimeLOW
Published2026-01-23

Policy pressure tracker for 2026-01-23: the TACO Pressure Index closed at 22.93/100, signaling a low pressure regime as inflation expectations and front-end rate pressure shaped the daily read. Includes charts, a component breakdown, and a narrative summary.

Pressure history

Composite score history

Trailing 90 sessions through 2026-01-23

Latest component scores

Bar chart of the latest component scores

Today’s component breakdown

Inflation expectations pressure

47.60/100

2.46% level, +10.00 bp vs 5 sessions 60% level + 40% change

Latest: 2.46 on 2026-01-23

Inflation pressure reflects both the breakeven level and any fresh 5-session rise.

2Y Treasury rate pressure

22.40/100

3.60% level, +4.00 bp vs 5 sessions 60% level + 40% change

Latest: 3.60 on 2026-01-23

Rates pressure reflects both the current 2Y level and any fresh 5-session rise.

VIX volatility pressure

13.39/100

16.09 index level

Latest: 16.09 on 2026-01-23

Higher implied volatility usually means greater market stress.

S&P 500 equity signal

8.31/100

-0.42% vs 5 sessions | pressure 8.31 | relief 0.00 signed 5-session move

Latest: 6,915.61 on 2026-01-23

A 5-session drawdown adds pressure. A 5-session rally adds relief and can partially offset the composite score.

Method in one paragraph

The TACO Pressure Index converts four live market inputs into comparable component scores and combines them into one composite reading. The equity leg is symmetric: 5-session drawdowns add pressure, while 5-session rallies add relief and can partially offset the total score. Rates, inflation, and volatility still combine a level component with a 5-session change component before the final result is grouped into LOW, ELEVATED, HIGH, and EXTREME regimes.