What Small Businesses Tell Us About the Economy That Wall Street Can’t

New GoDaddy Small Street data shows digital business growth accelerating in late 2025, signalling stronger job gains ahead

TEMPE, Ariz., March 3, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — New research from GoDaddy and UCLA Anderson Forecast finds that small business data offers earlier and stronger indication of upcoming U.S. economic performance than traditional measures such as the stock market. Last quarter’s data captures digital business activity rising year-over-year.

By bringing digital small businesses into the picture for the first time, the research shows how entrepreneurship can act as an early barometer of national economic health, complementing rather than replacing established measures. The findings come at a time when financial markets, jobs data, and on the ground, perceptions often tell different stories.

What Small Street Is Showing Today

In the fourth quarter of 2025, GoDaddy’s Participation Index rose compared to Q4 2024, signalling renewed growth in digital small business activity nationally. Historically, increases in the index have preceded stronger payroll employment growth and declines in unemployment within three to four quarters. The latest reading points to economic conditions consistent with improving job growth in the months ahead.

The report, “What Small Businesses Tell Us About the Economy That Wall Street Can’t” introduces “Small Street” as a complementary economic lens built for this moment, giving small business data a seat alongside traditional market and macroeconomic indicators. While establishment-based data often arrives with a lag or reflects only national trends, Small Street adds a more real-time layer of insight by tracking entrepreneurial activity across millions of digital small and micro-businesses. Drawing on signals such as the number of digital entrepreneurs, new digital ventures, and GoDaddy’s proprietary Participation Index, the lens captures shifts within a few months at a highly granular, local level.

Key findings include:

  • Small business indicators have a stronger relationship to economic conditions such as GDP growth, payroll employment growth and declines in unemployment than stock market returns.

  • Indicators tied to entrepreneurial activity reflect changes in economic conditions earlier than traditional labor market data.

  • Digital small business creation identifies new business formation earlier than government datasets.

Looking across decades of national data, the analysis reconfirms that stock market returns are statistically linked to economic outcomes, but the relationships are relatively modest. By comparison, small business indicators, specifically the creation of new businesses frequently with a physical location, show two to five times stronger relationships with real economic conditions.

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