• Trade
  • Markets
  • Copy
  • Contests
  • News
  • 24/7
  • Calendar
  • Q&A
  • Chats
Trending
Screeners
SYMBOL
LAST
BID
ASK
HIGH
LOW
NET CHG.
%CHG.
SPREAD
SPX
S&P 500 Index
6875.75
6875.75
6875.75
6895.79
6858.32
+18.63
+ 0.27%
--
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
48016.92
48016.92
48016.92
48133.54
47871.51
+165.99
+ 0.35%
--
IXIC
NASDAQ Composite Index
23574.89
23574.89
23574.89
23680.03
23506.00
+69.76
+ 0.30%
--
USDX
US Dollar Index
98.900
98.980
98.900
99.060
98.740
-0.080
-0.08%
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.16459
1.16468
1.16459
1.16715
1.16277
+0.00014
+ 0.01%
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.33354
1.33362
1.33354
1.33622
1.33159
+0.00083
+ 0.06%
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4216.20
4216.61
4216.20
4259.16
4194.54
+9.03
+ 0.21%
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
60.042
60.072
60.042
60.236
59.187
+0.659
+ 1.11%
--

Community Accounts

Signal Accounts
--
Profit Accounts
--
Loss Accounts
--
View More

Become a signal provider

Sell trading signals to earn additional income

View More

Guide to Copy Trading

Get started with ease and confidence

View More

Signal Accounts for Members

All Signal Accounts

Best Return
  • Best Return
  • Best P/L
  • Best MDD
Past 1W
  • Past 1W
  • Past 1M
  • Past 1Y

All Contests

  • All
  • Trump Updates
  • Recommend
  • Stocks
  • Cryptocurrencies
  • Central Banks
  • Featured News
Top News Only
Share

Baker Hughes - US Drillers Add Oil And Natgas Rigs For Fourth Time In Five Weeks

Share

Baker Hughes - USA Oil Rig Count Rose 6 At 413

Share

Baker Hughes - US Natgas Rig Count Fell 1 At 129

Share

Baker Hughes - Gulf Of Mexico Rig Count Up 1, North Dakota Rigs Unchanged, Pennsylvania Unchanged, Texas Unchanged In Week To Dec 5

Share

The Total Number Of Drilling Rigs In The United States For The Week Ending December 5 Was 549, Compared To 544 In The Previous Week

Share

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney And Mexican President Jaime Sinbaum Discussed The Recent Bilateral Framework

Share

Barclays Is Exploring The Acquisition Of Evelyn Partners

Share

Democratic Members Of The Senate Banking Committee Are Pressuring President Trump's Republican Camp To Have Federal Housing Finance Agency (FhFA) Commissioner Bill Pulte Appear Before A Hearing By The End Of January 2026

Share

Trump Says He Will Talk Trade With Leaders Of Mexico, Canada At World Cup Draw

Share

US Envoy Kushner Asked To Meet France's Sarkozy In Jail

Share

Anthropic Executive Amodei Met With President Trump’s Administration Officials On Thursday And Also Met With A Bipartisan Group In The Senate

Share

Chechen Leader Kadyrov Says Grozny Was Attacked By Ukrainian Drone

Share

Cnn Brasil: Brazil Ex-President Bolsonaro Signals Support For Senator Flavio Bolsonaro As Presidential Candidate Next Year

Share

French Energy Minister: Request For State Aid Approval For EDF's Six Nuclear Reactor Projects Has Been Sent To Brussels

Share

Congo Orders Cobalt Exporters To Pre-Pay 10% Royalty Within 48 Hours Under New Export Rules, Government Circular Seen By Reuters Shows

Share

US Court Says Trump Can Remove Democrats From Two Federal Labor Boards

Share

In The Past 24 Hours, The Marketvector Digital Asset 100 Small Cap Index Fell 6.62%, Temporarily Reporting 4066.13 Points. The Overall Trend Continued To Decline, And The Decline Accelerated At 00:00 Beijing Time

Share

MSCI Nordic Countries Index Rose 0.5% To 358.24 Points, A New Closing High Since November 13, With A Cumulative Gain Of Over 0.66% This Week. Among The Ten Sectors, The Nordic Industrials Sector Saw The Largest Increase. Neste Oyj Rose 5.4%, Leading The Pack Among Nordic Stocks

Share

Brazil's Petrobras Could Start Production At New Tartaruga Verde Well In Two Years

Share

US President Trump: We Get Along Very Well With Canada And Mexico

TIME
ACT
FCST
PREV
France Current Account (Not SA) (Oct)

A:--

F: --

P: --

France Trade Balance (SA) (Oct)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Italy Retail Sales MoM (SA) (Oct)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Euro Zone Employment YoY (SA) (Q3)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Euro Zone GDP Final YoY (Q3)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Euro Zone GDP Final QoQ (Q3)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Euro Zone Employment Final QoQ (SA) (Q3)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Euro Zone Employment Final (SA) (Q3)

A:--

F: --

P: --
Brazil PPI MoM (Oct)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Mexico Consumer Confidence Index (Nov)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Canada Unemployment Rate (SA) (Nov)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Canada Labor Force Participation Rate (SA) (Nov)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Canada Employment (SA) (Nov)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Canada Part-Time Employment (SA) (Nov)

A:--

F: --

P: --

Canada Full-time Employment (SA) (Nov)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. Personal Income MoM (Sept)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. PCE Price Index YoY (SA) (Sept)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. PCE Price Index MoM (Sept)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. Personal Outlays MoM (SA) (Sept)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. Core PCE Price Index MoM (Sept)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. Core PCE Price Index YoY (Sept)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. UMich 5-Year-Ahead Inflation Expectations Prelim YoY (Dec)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures MoM (Sept)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. 5-10 Year-Ahead Inflation Expectations (Dec)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. UMich Current Economic Conditions Index Prelim (Dec)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. UMich Consumer Sentiment Index Prelim (Dec)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. UMich 1-Year-Ahead Inflation Expectations Prelim (Dec)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. UMich Consumer Expectations Index Prelim (Dec)

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. Weekly Total Rig Count

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. Weekly Total Oil Rig Count

A:--

F: --

P: --

U.S. Consumer Credit (SA) (Oct)

--

F: --

P: --

China, Mainland Foreign Exchange Reserves (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

China, Mainland Exports YoY (USD) (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

China, Mainland Imports YoY (CNH) (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

China, Mainland Imports YoY (USD) (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

China, Mainland Imports (CNH) (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

China, Mainland Trade Balance (CNH) (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

China, Mainland Exports (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

Japan Wages MoM (Oct)

--

F: --

P: --

Japan Trade Balance (Oct)

--

F: --

P: --

Japan Nominal GDP Revised QoQ (Q3)

--

F: --

P: --

Japan Trade Balance (Customs Data) (SA) (Oct)

--

F: --

P: --

Japan GDP Annualized QoQ Revised (Q3)

--

F: --

P: --
China, Mainland Exports YoY (CNH) (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

China, Mainland Trade Balance (USD) (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

Germany Industrial Output MoM (SA) (Oct)

--

F: --

P: --

Euro Zone Sentix Investor Confidence Index (Dec)

--

F: --

P: --

Canada Leading Index MoM (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

Canada National Economic Confidence Index

--

F: --

P: --

U.S. Dallas Fed PCE Price Index YoY (Sept)

--

F: --

P: --

U.S. 3-Year Note Auction Yield

--

F: --

P: --

U.K. BRC Overall Retail Sales YoY (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

U.K. BRC Like-For-Like Retail Sales YoY (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

Australia Overnight (Borrowing) Key Rate

--

F: --

P: --

RBA Rate Statement
RBA Press Conference
Germany Exports MoM (SA) (Oct)

--

F: --

P: --

U.S. NFIB Small Business Optimism Index (SA) (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

Mexico Core CPI YoY (Nov)

--

F: --

P: --

Q&A with Experts
    • All
    • Chatrooms
    • Groups
    • Friends
    Connecting
    .
    .
    .
    Type here...
    Add Symbol or Code

      No matching data

      All
      Trump Updates
      Recommend
      Stocks
      Cryptocurrencies
      Central Banks
      Featured News
      • All
      • Russia-Ukraine Conflict
      • Middle East Flashpoint
      • All
      • Russia-Ukraine Conflict
      • Middle East Flashpoint

      Search
      Products

      Charts Free Forever

      Chats Q&A with Experts
      Screeners Economic Calendar Data Tools
      Membership Features
      Data Warehouse Market Trends Institutional Data Policy Rates Macro

      Market Trends

      Market Sentiment Order Book Forex Correlations

      Top Indicators

      Charts Free Forever
      Markets

      News

      News Analysis 24/7 Columns Education
      From Institutions From Analysts
      Topics Columnists

      Latest Views

      Latest Views

      Trending Topics

      Top Columnists

      Latest Update

      Signals

      Copy Rankings Latest Signals Become a signal provider AI Rating
      Contests
      Brokers

      Overview Brokers Assessment Rankings Regulators News Claims
      Broker listing Forex Brokers Comparison Tool Live Spread Comparison Scam
      Q&A Complaint Scam Alert Videos Tips to Detect Scam
      More

      Business
      Events
      Careers About Us Advertising Help Center

      White Label

      Data API

      Web Plug-ins

      Affiliate Program

      Awards Institution Evaluation IB Seminar Salon Event Exhibition
      Vietnam Thailand Singapore Dubai
      Fans Party Investment Sharing Session
      FastBull Summit BrokersView Expo
      Recent Searches
        Top Searches
          Markets
          News
          Analysis
          User
          24/7
          Economic Calendar
          Education
          Data
          • Names
          • Latest
          • Prev

          View All

          No data

          Scan to Download

          Faster Charts, Chat Faster!

          Download App
          English
          • English
          • Español
          • العربية
          • Bahasa Indonesia
          • Bahasa Melayu
          • Tiếng Việt
          • ภาษาไทย
          • Français
          • Italiano
          • Türkçe
          • Русский язык
          • 简中
          • 繁中
          Open Account
          Search
          Products
          Charts Free Forever
          Markets
          News
          Signals

          Copy Rankings Latest Signals Become a signal provider AI Rating
          Contests
          Brokers

          Overview Brokers Assessment Rankings Regulators News Claims
          Broker listing Forex Brokers Comparison Tool Live Spread Comparison Scam
          Q&A Complaint Scam Alert Videos Tips to Detect Scam
          More

          Business
          Events
          Careers About Us Advertising Help Center

          White Label

          Data API

          Web Plug-ins

          Affiliate Program

          Awards Institution Evaluation IB Seminar Salon Event Exhibition
          Vietnam Thailand Singapore Dubai
          Fans Party Investment Sharing Session
          FastBull Summit BrokersView Expo

          Eurozone GDP Main Aggregates and Employment Estimates for the Second Quarter of 2024

          Eurostat

          Data Interpretation

          Economic

          Summary:

          GDP up by 0.2% and employment up by 0.2% in the euro area.In the EU, GDP up by 0.2% and employment up by 0.1%

          GDP growth in the euro area and the EU

          In the second quarter of 2024, seasonally adjusted GDP increased by 0.2% in both the euro area and the EU, compared with the previous quarter, according to an estimate published by Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union. In the first quarter of 2024, GDP had grown by 0.3% in both zones.
          Compared with the same quarter of the previous year, seasonally adjusted GDP increased by 0.6% in the euro area and by 0.8% in the EU in the second quarter of 2024, after +0.5% in the euro area and +0.7% in the EU in the previous quarter.
          During the second quarter of 2024, GDP in the United States increased by 0.7% compared to the previous quarter (after +0.4% in the first quarter of 2024). Compared with the same quarter of the previous year, GDP increased by 3.1% (after +2.9% in the previous quarter).

          GDP growth by Member State

          Poland (+1.5%) recorded the highest increase of GDP compared to the previous quarter, followed by Greece (+1.1%) and the Netherlands (+1.0%). The highest decreases were observed in Ireland (-1.0%), Latvia (-0.9%) and Austria (-0.4%).

          GDP components and contributions to growth

          GDP components evolved in the second quarter of 2024 as follows:
          household final consumption expenditure decreased by 0.1% in the euro area and increased by 0.1% in the EU (after +0.3% in the euro area and +0.4% in the EU in the previous quarter),
          government final consumption expenditure increased by 0.6% in the euro area and by 0.7% in the EU (after +0.1% in both zones in the previous quarter),
          gross fixed capital formation decreased by 2.2% in the euro area and by 1.8% the EU (after -1.8% and -1.7% respectively),
          exports increased by 1.4% both in the euro area and in the EU (after +1.1% in the euro area and +0.7% in the EU), and
          imports increased by 0.5% in the euro area and by 0.6% in the EU (after -0.6% and -0.5% respectively).
          The contribution to GDP growth from:
          household final consumption expenditure was negligible for both the euro area and the EU (0.0 percentage points – pp for both),
          government final expenditure was positive for both the euro area and the EU (+0.1 pp for both),
          gross fixed capital formation was negative for both the euro area (-0.5 pp) and the EU (-0.4 pp),
          changes in inventories was negligible for both the euro area and the EU (0.0 pp for both), and
          exports less imports was positive for both the euro area (+0.5 pp) and the EU (+0.4 pp).

          Employment growth in the euro area and EU

          The number of employed persons increased by 0.2% in the euro area and by 0.1% in the EU in the second quarter of 2024, compared with the previous quarter. In the first quarter of 2024, employment had grown by 0.3% in both zones.
          Compared with the same quarter of the previous year, employment increased by 0.8% in both the euro area and the EU in the second quarter of 2024, after +1.0% in the euro area and +0.9% in the EU in the first quarter of 2024.
          Hours worked increased by 0.2% in the euro area and by 0.1% in the EU in the second quarter of 2024, compared with the previous quarter. Compared with the same quarter of the previous year, the hours worked increased by 1.4% in the euro area and by 1.2% in the EU
          These data provide a picture of labour input consistent with the output and income measure of national accounts.

          Employment growth in Member States

          In the second quarter of 2024, Ireland, Lithuania (both +1.1%) and Estonia (+0.8%) recorded the highest growth of employment in persons compared with the previous quarter. The highest decrease of employment was recorded in Romania (-0.5%) and Finland (-0.4%).

          Employment levels in the euro area and EU

          Based on seasonally adjusted figures, Eurostat estimates that in the second quarter of 2024, 218.6 million people were employed in the EU, of which 170.1 million were in the euro area.

          Evolution of labour productivity in the euro area and EU

          The combination of GDP and employment data allows an estimation of labour productivity
          In the second quarter of 2024, productivity based on persons decreased by 0.3% in the euro area and remained stable in the EU
          Based on hours worked, productivity compared with the same quarter of the previous year decreased by 0.2% in the euro area and increased by 0.1% in the EU.
          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Labour Force Survey, August 2024

          Statistics Canada

          Economic

          Little overall change in employment in August

          Employment was little changed in August (+22,000; +0.1%), as gains in part-time work (+66,000; +1.8%) were largely offset by a decline in full-time work (-44,000; -0.3%). This was the fourth consecutive month of little overall employment change.
          The employment rate—the proportion of the population aged 15 and older who are employed—decreased by 0.1 percentage points to 60.8% in August, the fourth consecutive monthly decline and the 10th decline in the past 11 months. On a year-over-year basis, the employment rate was down 1.2 percentage points in August, as employment growth (+1.6%) was outpaced by growth in the population aged 15 and older in the Labour Force Survey (LFS) (+3.5%).
          The number of private sector employees rose by 38,000 (+0.3%) in August, largely offsetting a similar-sized decrease in the previous month (-42,000; -0.3%). The increase in private sector employment in August was the first since April. Public sector employment and self-employment were both little changed in August.

          Year-over-year employment growth concentrated among core-aged men and women

          In August, employment grew by 20,000 (+0.3%) among core-aged women (25 to 54 years old) and held steady across other major demographic groups.
          Employment growth in the 12 months to August was concentrated among people in the core working age. While employment was up on a year-over-year basis for men (+207,000; +3.0%) and women (+115,000; +1.8%) aged 25 to 54 in August, it was virtually unchanged among youth (15 to 24 years old) and people aged 55 and older.
          On a year-over-year basis, the employment rate was down for youth as well as for people in the core working age in August. Declines were larger for young men (-4.5 percentage points to 52.3%) and young women (-3.5 percentage points to 55.2%), reflecting relatively strong population growth and virtually no employment growth for the youth population.

          Unemployment rate increases to 6.6% in August

          The unemployment rate rose 0.2 percentage points to 6.6% in August, after holding steady in July. The unemployment rate in August was the highest since May 2017, outside of 2020 and 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic. The unemployment rate has generally trended up since April 2023, rising 1.5 percentage points over this period.
          There were 1.5 million unemployed people in August 2024, an increase of 60,000 (+4.3%) from July and an increase of 272,000 (+22.9%) from August 2023.
          Among those who were unemployed in July, 16.7% had transitioned to employment in August (not seasonally adjusted). This was lower than the corresponding proportion in August 2023 (23.2%), an indication that unemployed people may be facing greater difficulties finding work.

          Unemployment rate rises for core-aged and older men in August

          In August, the unemployment rate rose for men aged 25 to 54 years old (+0.4 percentage points to 5.7%) and for men aged 55 and older (+0.4 percentage points to 5.5%), while it was little changed for other major demographic groups.
          Although the unemployment rate was up across all age groups on a year-over-year basis in August, the increase was largest for youth (+3.2 percentage points to 14.5% in August). The rate was up for young men (+3.8 percentage points to 16.3%) and young women (+2.6 percentage points to 12.6%).
          For core-aged people, the unemployment rate was up 0.9 percentage points to 5.4% on a year-over-year basis in August. Increases for this age group were observed across all levels of educational attainment. On a year-over-year basis, the unemployment rate was up in August for core-aged people with a high school diploma or less (+1.5 percentage points to 8.2%), for those with some post-secondary education below a bachelor's degree (+0.7 percentage points to 5.5%) as well as for those with a bachelor's degree or a higher level of education (+0.9 percentage points to 6.2%) (not seasonally adjusted).

          Difficult summer for students seeking employment

          From May to August, the LFS collects labour market data on youth aged 15 to 24 who were attending school full time in March and who intend to return to school full time in the fall. With data for August now available, it is possible to examine the labour market situation of returning students in 2024, over the entire four-month summer period (not seasonally adjusted).
          On average from May to August 2024, the unemployment rate for returning students aged 15 to 24 was 16.7%, up from 12.9% in 2023. The unemployment rate for the summer of 2024 was the highest since 2012 (when it was 17.6%), excluding the summer of 2020.
          The unemployment rate of returning students over the summer months of 2024 was up for both young men (+4.5 percentage points to 18.1%) and young women (+3.3 percentage points to 15.5%) compared with the same period in 2023.
          The unemployment rate increased for returning students across all age groups in the summer of 2024 compared with the summer of 2023. Among the youngest—those aged 15 and 16—more than one-quarter (27.0%) were unemployed this summer (up from 22.1% in 2023). For returning students aged 17 to 19, the unemployment rate was 17.7%, up from 12.5% in 2023. For older returning students—those aged 20 to 24—the unemployment rate was 11.1%, up from 8.3% in 2023.
          The summer job market in 2024 was particularly difficult for returning students aged 15 to 24 who were part of the three largest racialized groups. Among Black returning students, the unemployment rate was 29.5% on average from May to August 2024. This represents an increase of 10.1 percentage points compared with the same period in 2023. The unemployment rate was also up in the summer of 2024 among Chinese students who intended to return to school full time in the fall (+7.4 percentage points to 22.4%) and their South Asian counterparts (+5.1 percentage points to 21.5%).

          Employment up in educational services and health care and social assistance, while falling in "other services" and professional, scientific and technical services

          In August, employment rose by 27,000 (+1.7%) in educational services, the first increase since January. There were 75,000 (+5.1%) more people employed in this sector compared with 12 months earlier.
          In health care and social assistance, employment increased by 25,000 (+0.9%) in August. In the 12 months to August, employment gains in health care and social assistance (+157,000; +5.8%) were the largest of any sector and accounted for nearly half (49.6%) of total net employment growth.
          Year-over-year employment growth in health care and social assistance was recorded both in the private sector (+94,000; +8.6%) and in the public sector (+77,000; +6.1%). Self-employment in health care and social assistance was little changed over the period (not seasonally adjusted).
          In August, employment decreased in "other services" (which includes personal and repair services) (-19,000; -2.3%) following five months of little change.
          Employment also fell in professional, scientific and technical services (-16,000; -0.8%) in August. Despite the monthly decline, employment in the industry was up by 47,000 (+2.5%) on a year-over-year basis.

          Unemployment rate rises in most of the large census metropolitan areas

          Among Canada's 20 largest census metropolitan areas (CMAs), based on the size of the LFS population aged 15 and older, Windsor posted the highest unemployment rate at 9.2% in August, followed by Edmonton (8.6%) and Toronto (8.0%). Unemployment rates were lowest in the Victoria (3.3%) and Québec (4.0%) CMAs (three-month averages).
          On a year-over-year basis, the unemployment rate rose in nearly all 20 of the largest CMAs, with the biggest increases in Windsor (+3.2 percentage points to 9.2%), Oshawa (+2.5 percentage points to 7.8%) and Edmonton (+2.4 percentage points to 8.6%) (three-month averages).

          In the spotlight: Recent immigrants see little change in their average hourly earnings in August and are less likely to believe they are paid appropriately

          On a year-over-year basis, average hourly wages for all employees increased 5.0% (+$1.69 to $35.16) in August, following increases of 5.4% in June and 5.2% in July (not seasonally adjusted).
          Wage growth varied across different population groups. For recent immigrants (who had landed in Canada within the previous five years), average hourly wages were little changed at $30.59 (-1.3%) on a year-over-year basis in August. Among more established immigrants (who had landed in Canada more than five years earlier), average hourly wages rose 6.3% in the 12 months to August (+$2.15 to $36.15).
          In comparison, Canadian-born employees saw their average hourly wage increase by 6.0% (+$2.04 to $35.83 per hour) over the same period.
          In August, the LFS included additional questions about the extent to which workers were satisfied with their pay and felt that they were paid appropriately, considering their efforts and achievements.
          The results show that the majority of employees aged 15 to 69 either strongly agreed (22.8%) or somewhat agreed (39.8%) that they were paid appropriately in their job. More than 7 in 10 employees (72.5%) who had hourly wages in the top quartile of the wage distribution strongly or somewhat agreed that they were paid appropriately, compared with fewer than 6 in 10 (56.5%) among those with wages in the bottom quartile of the wage distribution.
          In August, more than one-third of employees who were recent immigrants (35.1%) had hourly wages in the lowest quartile of the wage distribution, compared with less than one-quarter for their Canadian-born counterparts (23.5%).
          The proportion of recent immigrants who somewhat or strongly agreed that they were paid appropriately (57.3%) was lower than the corresponding proportions for both employees born in Canada (64.0%) and more established immigrants (60.2%).
          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Morgan Stanley Cuts Oil Forecast Again As Concerns Deepen

          Alex

          Energy

          Commodity

          Morgan Stanley reduced its Brent crude price forecasts for the second time in a matter of weeks, as demand challenges mount while supplies remain plentiful.

          The global benchmark will average US$75 (RM327.69) a barrel in the fourth quarter, according to a note from analysts including Martijn Rats. That compares with an earlier projection of US$80 between October and December, which was issued just last month in a cut from the prior outlook for US$85. Predictions for most of next year were also pared back slightly.

          Brent recently tumbled to the lowest close since late 2021 as sustained concerns about weaker Chinese demand fused with signals that the US economy may be slowing. At the same time, output remains ample, forcing Opec+ to defer a plan to relax its own production curbs.

          “The recent trajectory of oil prices has similarities to other periods with considerable demand weakness,” Rats and his colleagues said in the report on Monday. Time spreads — price comparisons along the futures curve — indicated the coming of “recession-like inventory builds”, although it was too early to make this the bank’s base case, they said.

          Morgan Stanley’s rethink about the outlook has been echoed by concerns at other leading banks. Goldman Sachs Group Inc pared its view last month, while more recently Citigroup Inc said the market looked oversupplied and prices could average US$60 a barrel in 2025 unless Opec+ cut deeper.

          Brent — which sank almost 10% last week — traded near US$72 a barrel on Monday, with major commodity trader Trafigura Group telling an industry conference in Singapore that the price was set to drop into the US$60s in the near future.

          Source: Theedgemarkets

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          XAU/USD Outlook: Gold Continues To Move Within Larger Range

          Kevin Du

          Forex

          Gold remains at the back foot at the start of the week, after last Friday’s 0.8% drop and a weekly close below $2500.

          The metal’s price was deflated by US labor data on last Friday, as employment increased below expectations but unexpected drop in jobless rate cooled fears about stronger weakness in the labor sector, contributing to bets for Fed’s rate cut by 0.25% rather than more aggressive approach with 50 basis points cut.

          Markets shift focus towards release of US inflation data for August, due later this week, which will provide more details about Fed’s decision in September’s monetary policy meeting.

          On the other hand, the yellow metal remains underpinned by growing concerns about the situation in the US economy, as well as persisting geopolitical tensions, which adds to scenario of prolonged consolidation before the price resumes higher.

          Technical picture remains bullish overall despite daily studies somewhat weakened, with larger bullish bias to stay intact while the price holds above three-week range floor at $2470 zone.

          Three consecutive weekly Doji candles point to strong indecision and signal prolonged sideways mode, with mixed daily studies (14-d momentum turned negative, stochastic and RSI remain in positive territory, MA’s in mixed configuration) contributing to current picture.

          Technical studies still favor scenario of $2470 pivot holding dips and offering fresh buying opportunities however, fundamentals are likely to play a key role and to gold’s key driver in the near term.

          In case $2470 support is lost, stronger pullback towards $2431 (rising 55DMA) and $2400/$2390 zone (psychological / 100DMA) in extension, could be likely scenario.

          Conversely, bulls may strengthen grip if the price returns and stabilizes above $2500 level and shift focus towards new all-time high at $2531, violation of which to spark fresh acceleration higher.

          Res: 2500; 2505; 2523; 2531.

          Sup: 2485; 2474; 2470; 2457.

          Source: ACTIONFOREX

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Pound to Euro Week Ahead Forecast: Pressured Ahead of Wage & GDP Data

          Warren Takunda

          Economic

          Last week, we reported September is historically a month in which global equities fall, which can keep the Pound-Dollar and Pound-Euro exchange rates under pressure in the coming three weeks. However, we also pointed out that supportive UK interest rate expectations can limit the downside.
          We think price action is verifying this, and any further selling pressure in the Pound to Euro exchange rate (GBP/EUR) should be limited at the first support zone of 1.1815 and then 1.18 (both of which proved supportive during the June-July spell of weakness).
          Pound to Euro Week Ahead Forecast: Pressured Ahead of Wage & GDP Data_1

          Above: GBP/EUR at daily intervals.

          GBP/EUR has dipped below its short-term nine-day moving average, a level that has some useful predictive power for this particular exchange rate: we note that when it breaks below here, it can typically spend up to two trading weeks below it. This will limit recoveries to 1.1862.
          A test of the 1.1815 and 1.18 support zones can happen if this Tuesday's UK jobs report is much weaker than expected. The market looks for employment to have risen 84K in the three months to July, with the unemployment rate at 4.1%.
          However, it will be the job figures that will potentially be of more significance for the Pound as this is something that Bank of England will be watching closely. The Bank is not expected to cut rates again, but there is some debate over whether they will move again in October and November.
          A weaker-than-forecast wage print could boost these odds, which will weigh on the Pound. Average earnings is predicted to have risen by 4.1% in the three months to July, down from 4.5%. Wage pressures have been coming down, but some economists are concerned that they are not coming down fast enough.
          If this is the case, then the data can beat expectations and lower the odds of an October rate cut, which can boost the Pound against the Euro and other currencies. "Another decline in nominal pay could ease UK inflation fears and allow the BOE to cut rates later this year, although we still believe that they will cut rates at a slower pace than the ECB and the Federal Reserve," says Kathleen Brooks, an analyst at XM.com.
          For Pound-Euro, we think any strength will be limited owing to the febrile global sentiment backdrop and look for gains to struggle to make it beyond 1.1882. Note, the exchange rate has not closed above here since July and recent attempts to break and record a daily close above this level have failed.
          From a technical perspective, therefore, the data should determine at which end of the 1.1882-1.1815 spectrum the exchange rate trades, and we place low odds of a sustained break on either side of these levels.
          Wednesday will see the release of UK GDP figures for July, with the market looking for 0.2% growth, up from the previous month's flat 0% outturn. On paper, the GDP figure is secondary to the wage release, but any sizeable surprises (i.e. more than 2pps) can shake the market, with Sterling likely to weaken on any disappointments and rise on any surprising strength.
          Note too that the U.S. monthly inflation release is due later in the day, and given the importance of global drivers, this could ultimately prove to be the highlight of the week for Pound exchange rates. Should U.S. inflation undershoot forecasts, market expectations for a 50 basis point rate cut at the Federal Reserve on September 18 will increase, boosting equity markets and supporting Pound-Euro.
          However, should the data come in stronger, expect further selling pressures as the odds of a 50bp cut are completely erased, in which case stocks and the Pound can come under further pressure.
          Last week, we heard from an influential member of the Federal Reserve's rate-setting committee that although rates need to come down, the path of progress remains dependent on the data. Markets read this as a signal that the Fed is not concerned enough to pursue 50bp cuts and will prefer to stick to more conventional 25bp increments. There is more room for the market to adjust to this view, which would mean softer equity markets, a firmer dollar and a downside bias in the Pound.

          Source: Poundsterlinglive

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Thailand To Distribute First US $4.2b Of Handout Scheme Starting This Month

          Kevin Du

          Thailand will distribute 145 billion baht (US$4.2 billion or RM18.63 billion) of its "digital wallet" handout programme earlier than scheduled to support vulnerable groups, a deputy finance minister said on Monday, stressing the need for short-term economic stimulus.

          In remarks during a budget debate in the Senate, Julapun Amornvivat said the government has prepared 450 billion baht (US$13.29 billion) in total for its signature handout programme, which seeks to stimulate economic activity by transferring 10,000 baht to 50 million Thais to spend in their localities.

          The measure, which was scheduled for rollout in the last quarter of this year, is the cornerstone of Thailand's plans to jumpstart Southeast Asia's second-largest economy, which grew 2.3% in the second quarter.

          A change in government last month, caused by a court's shock removal of Srettha Thavisin as premier, has left uncertainty about when promised stimulus measures would commence.

          Part of the handout will now be in cash, Srettha's ally and successor, Paetongtarn Shinawatra said last week.

          Finance official Julapun said 32 million people had registered so far for the programme including vulnerable groups, but not those without smartphones, through which funds were due to be received via an application.

          It was not immediately clear the first tranche of payments, which Julapun said would be made later in September and would be from the 2024 budget and other sources, would be in cash.

          His remarks come after Paetongtarn, the daughter of politically influential billionaire Thaksin Shinawatra, at the weekend promised to stimulate the economy right away and follow through on Srettha's policy agenda.

          Her new government published a policy statement on Sunday that Paetongtarn will deliver to parliament later this week.

          The handout scheme has been criticised by economists including two former central bank governors as fiscally irresponsible. The government rejects that, but has struggled to find sources of funding.

          It insists the policy is necessary to energise the economy, which the central bank expects to grow just 2.6% this year, up from 1.9% in 2023 and far adrift of most regional peers.

          Source: Theedgemarkets

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          The Commodities Feed: Oil Pressure

          ING

          Commodity

          Energy – Saudis cut OSP

          Despite OPEC+ delaying its supply increase by two months, oil prices still had a weak finish to trading last week. ICE Brent settled 2.24% lower on Friday, leaving it just above US$71/bbl. Demand weakness and a soft oil balance in 2025 are still clearly a concern. While OPEC+ cuts leave the market a bit tighter for the remainder of this year, this doesn’t resolve the surplus that is expected next year. However, prices are trading stronger in early morning trading today.

          Unsurprisingly, speculators reduced their positioning in oil. Speculators cut their net long in ICE Brent by 38,427 lots over the last reporting week to leave them with a net long of 41,645 lots. This move was predominantly driven by fresh shorts entering the market. The gross short in ICE Brent is relatively large, standing at 143,759 lots. This large short leaves the market vulnerable to a short covering rallying with the right catalyst, although clearly sentiment is still very negative. In NYMEX WTI, speculators also cut their net long, reducing their position by 61,659 lots over the last reporting week to 124,868 lots.

          Saudi Arabia cut its official selling prices (OSP) for all grades to all regions, highlighting concerns over the demand picture. The Saudi’s flagship Arab Light into Asia was cut by US$.70/bbl to US$1.30/bbl over the benchmark, the weakest level since November 2021.

          The recent weakness in the market is very much going to be the key talking point at the APPEC week, which gets underway in Singapore this week. Weak Chinese demand is likely to dominate discussions, along with the broader weakness in refinery margins around the globe. This will naturally lead to discussions over what options OPEC+ has to try to stabilise the market. This is something that will become increasingly more difficult next year unless OPEC+ takes action to address the expected 2025 surplus. The US election and its potential impact on the oil market will likely be another theme discussed. A Trump victory could see a more hawkish US stance taken against Iran, potentially providing the opportunity for OPEC+ to unwind voluntary cuts next year.

          In addition to APPEC week, which is likely to provide a lot of noise over views on the oil market, there will also be a number of data releases this week. OPEC will release its monthly oil market report on Tuesday and the market will be watching closely to see if the group makes any further revisions lower in its demand forecasts. China will also release its first batch of trade data for August on Tuesday, which will provide some more insight into how Chinese oil demand is performing. Cumulative imports over the first seven months of the year are already down 2.4% year-on-year. The EIA will release its Short Term Energy Outlook on the same day, which will include its outlook for the global market and the latest US crude oil production forecasts. Then on Thursday, the IEA will release its monthly oil market report, where it will share its outlook for the remainder of this year and 2025.

          Metals – China's metal exchange stocks decline

          Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) inventory data shows that weekly inventories for all base metals (except for lead) fell over the reporting week. Copper stocks fell by 26,371 tonnes for a ninth consecutive week to 215,374 tonnes. This was the biggest weekly decline since March last year, taking total inventories to the lowest level since March. Meanwhile, aluminium inventories decreased by 3,973 tonnes to 285,947 tonnes. Zinc and nickel stocks fell marginally over the week. In contrast, lead inventories rose by 18% week-over-week to 30,525 tonnes.

          The latest positioning data from the CFTC shows that speculators decreased their net long in COMEX copper by 4,368 lots to 14,552 lots as of 3 September 2024. In precious metals, managed money net longs in COMEX gold decreased by 10,228 lots to 226,590 lots over the last reporting week. Similarly, speculators decreased net longs of silver by 8,781 lots to 26,501 lots as of last Tuesday.

          Agriculture – Cocoa strengthens on declining stockpiles

          US cocoa futures extended gains last Friday on declining stockpiles at the exchange due to poor harvests from top producers (Ivory Coast and Ghana). As per recent data, warehouse inventories in the US have been declining consistently since 11 July and fell by 31.8k bags (145lb) to 2.42m bags (145lb) as of 5 September 2024, the lowest since January 2009. Earlier, the International Cocoa Organisation raised its supply deficit estimates to 462kt for the current season. However, the broader expectation is that the supply situation will improve in the 2024/25 season.

          The latest data from the International Coffee Organisation (ICO) shows that global coffee exports stood at 11.3m bags in July, up 12.2% YoY. This includes Arabica exports of 7m bags (+15.8% YoY) and Robusta exports of 4.3m bags (+ 6.7% YoY). This leaves shipments between October 2023 and July 2024 at 115.01m bags, up 10.5% YoY.

          The latest data from Ukraine’s Agriculture Ministry shows that grain exports in the current season have risen so far by 53% YoY to 7.5mt as of 6 September. The increase was largely driven by wheat exports of 4mt, which almost doubled from last year. Similarly, corn exports stood at 2.4mt (+9% YoY).

          US weekly net export sales for the week ending 29 August show strong demand for US corn, while soybean and wheat shipments fell over the week. Weekly export sales of wheat were down to 329.5kt for the week, lower than the 497.6kt a week ago and 381.5kt the same time last year. Similarly, soybean exports fell to 1,430.7kt, lower than 2,472.2kt in the previous week and 1,783.1kt a year ago. In contrast, US corn shipments stood at 1,649.4kt, above the 1,509.4kt reported a week ago and 949.7kt for the same period last year.

          Lastly, CFTC data shows that money managers decreased their net bearish bets in CBOT corn by 65,697 lots to 176,211 lots as of 3 September. The move was predominantly driven by falling short positions with gross shorts decreasing by 47,211 lots to 376,217 lots. Similarly, the speculative net short position in CBOT soybeans decreased by 22,455 lots to 154,096 lots over the last reporting week. Meanwhile, the net speculative short position in CBOT wheat fell by 13,578 lots to 42,624 lots over the last reporting week.

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share
          FastBull
          Copyright © 2025 FastBull Ltd

          728 RM B 7/F GEE LOK IND BLDG NO 34 HUNG TO RD KWUN TONG KLN HONG KONG

          TelegramInstagramTwitterfacebooklinkedin
          App Store Google Play Google Play
          Products
          Charts

          Chats

          Q&A with Experts
          Screeners
          Economic Calendar
          Data
          Tools
          Membership
          Features
          Function
          Markets
          Copy Trading
          Latest Signals
          Contests
          News
          Analysis
          24/7
          Columns
          Education
          Company
          Careers
          About Us
          Contact Us
          Advertising
          Help Center
          Feedback
          User Agreement
          Privacy Policy
          Business

          White Label

          Data API

          Web Plug-ins

          Poster Maker

          Affiliate Program

          Risk Disclosure

          The risk of loss in trading financial instruments such as stocks, FX, commodities, futures, bonds, ETFs and crypto can be substantial. You may sustain a total loss of the funds that you deposit with your broker. Therefore, you should carefully consider whether such trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances and financial resources.

          No decision to invest should be made without thoroughly conducting due diligence by yourself or consulting with your financial advisors. Our web content might not suit you since we don't know your financial conditions and investment needs. Our financial information might have latency or contain inaccuracy, so you should be fully responsible for any of your trading and investment decisions. The company will not be responsible for your capital loss.

          Without getting permission from the website, you are not allowed to copy the website's graphics, texts, or trademarks. Intellectual property rights in the content or data incorporated into this website belong to its providers and exchange merchants.

          Not Logged In

          Log in to access more features

          FastBull Membership

          Not yet

          Purchase

          Become a signal provider
          Help Center
          Customer Service
          Dark Mode
          Price Up/Down Colors

          Log In

          Sign Up

          Position
          Layout
          Fullscreen
          Default to Chart
          The chart page opens by default when you visit fastbull.com