Markets
Analysis
User
24/7
Economic Calendar
Education
Data
- Names
- Latest
- Prev












Signal Accounts for Members
All Signal Accounts
All Contests


Ambassador Enayati Says Iran Not Responsible For Attacks On Saudi Arabia's Ras Tanura And Shaybah Oil Facilities
Iranian Ambassador To Saudi Arabia Tells Reuters: Iran And Gulf Arab States Require A "Serious Review" Of Relations
Statistics Bureau - Israel February CPI +2.0% Year-On-Year Versus+1.8% In January (Reuters Forecast +1.9%)
Airstrikes Target Iraqi Popular Mobilisation Forces Positions South Of Kirkuk - Security Sources
Stocks From Asia Oceania Countries Will Be Available Immediately, Stocks From Europe And Americas Will Be Available End Of March - IEA Statement
Israeli Military Says It Expanding Scope Of Strikes Against Iranian Infrastructure In Additional Areas In Western And Central Iran
Egypt's Foreign Minister, Qatari Emir Discus Regional De-Escalation, Ending War During Doha Visit -Egyptian Statement
Death Toll From Israeli Attacks On Lebanon Since March 2 Rises To 850- Lebanese Health Ministry
[Venus Protocol: Anomalies Detected In The Vault, Actively Investigating] March 15, Venus Protocol Announced, "We Have Identified Abnormal Activity In The Liquidity Pool And Are Actively Investigating. Currently, It Appears That Only The And Cake Markets Are Affected. As The Investigation Progresses, We Will Share The Latest Information In A Timely Manner."

U.S. Durable Goods Orders MoM (Excl.Transport) (Jan)A:--
F: --
Canada Employment (SA) (Feb)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Non-Defense Capital Durable Goods Orders MoM (Excl. Aircraft) (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures MoM (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Annual Real GDP (Q4)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Durable Goods Orders MoM (Excl. Defense) (SA) (Jan)A:--
F: --
Canada Part-Time Employment (SA) (Feb)A:--
F: --
P: --
Canada Full-time Employment (SA) (Feb)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Core PCE Price Index YoY (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Personal Outlays MoM (SA) (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Core PCE Price Index MoM (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Durable Goods Orders MoM (Jan)A:--
F: --
U.S. PCE Price Index YoY (SA) (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. PCE Price Index MoM (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Personal Income MoM (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures Revised QoQ (Q4)A:--
F: --
P: --
Canada Unemployment Rate (SA) (Feb)A:--
F: --
P: --
Canada Labor Force Participation Rate (SA) (Feb)A:--
F: --
P: --
Canada Manufacturing New Orders MoM (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
Canada Manufacturing Unfilled Orders MoM (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
Canada Manufacturing Inventory MoM (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
Russia Trade Balance (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
Germany Current Account (Not SA) (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Dallas Fed PCE Price Index YoY (Jan)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. JOLTS Job Openings (SA) (Jan)A:--
F: --
U.S. 5-10 Year-Ahead Inflation Expectations (Mar)A:--
F: --
P: --
Russia CPI YoY (Feb)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Weekly Total Rig CountA:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Weekly Total Oil Rig CountA:--
F: --
P: --
Saudi Arabia CPI YoY (Feb)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.K. Rightmove House Price Index YoY (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland Industrial Output YoY (YTD) (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland Urban Area Unemployment Rate (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
Canada National Economic Confidence Index--
F: --
P: --
Canada New Housing Starts (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. NY Fed Manufacturing Prices Received Index (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Canada CPI MoM (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
Canada Core CPI YoY (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. NY Fed Manufacturing Employment Index (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. NY Fed Manufacturing New Orders Index (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Canada CPI YoY (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
Canada Core CPI MoM (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. NY Fed Manufacturing Index (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Canada Trimmed CPI YoY (SA) (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Industrial Output YoY (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Industrial Output MoM (SA) (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Capacity Utilization MoM (SA) (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Manufacturing Output MoM (SA) (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Manufacturing Capacity Utilization (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. NAHB Housing Market Index (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Dallas Fed PCE Price Index YoY (Jan)--
F: --
P: --
Australia Overnight (Borrowing) Key Rate--
F: --
P: --
RBA Rate Statement
RBA Press Conference
Indonesia 7-Day Reverse Repo Rate--
F: --
P: --
Indonesia Loan Growth YoY (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
Indonesia Deposit Facility Rate (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Indonesia Lending Facility Rate (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
Canada Existing Home Sales MoM (Feb)--
F: --
P: --
Germany ZEW Economic Sentiment Index (Mar)--
F: --
P: --
















































No matching data
In Germany, the Ifo indicator for January is released. The PMI report released on Friday rebounded more than expected so it will be interesting to see if the Ifo index shows the same picture of the economy.
In Germany, the Ifo indicator for January is released. The PMI report released on Friday rebounded more than expected so it will be interesting to see if the Ifo index shows the same picture of the economy.
The key events for the remainder of the week include rate decisions in the US, Sweden, and Canada on Thursday. On Friday, the focus will shift to European inflation, with preliminary data for January from Spain and Germany.
What happened over the weekend
US-brokered talks between Russia and Ukraine concluded on Saturday without any agreements, as reflected in statements from all three parties. Despite the lack of a deal, both Moscow and Kyiv expressed openness to continued dialogue, with a new round of discussions scheduled for next Sunday. The talks took place amid ongoing hostilities, including Russian airstrikes that left over a million Ukrainians without power in freezing winter conditions.
In Japan, PM Takaichi vowed to counter speculative market activity following Friday's sharp yen strengthening, warning of potential intervention if volatility escalates. The yen's rally, driven by intervention risk, has had spillover effects on the broader USD, which may find some support from the Federal Reserve's cautiously hawkish stance and resilient economic data.
In the US, domestic political tensions escalated after several Democratic senators threatened to block a Department of Homeland Security funding bill over calls for reforms and accountability within agencies like ICE. This move, triggered by public safety concerns following a fatal shooting involving a Border Patrol agent, raises the likelihood of a partial government shutdown as funding deadlines approach.
What happened Friday
In the euro area, January PMIs surprised to the downside. The composite PMI remained steady at 51.5, falling short of the consensus estimate of 51.9. The weaker-than-expected figure was primarily driven by a decline in the services PMI, which dropped to 51.9 from 52.4, against market expectations of a rise to 52.6. Meanwhile, manufacturing PMI showed a slight improvement, rising to 49.4 from 48.8, but it remains in contraction territory.
French PMIs highlighted diverging trends, with the services PMI falling to 47.9, signalling contraction, while manufacturing PMI surprised to the upside at 51.0. Although the services sector has been volatile, its current level aligns with earlier quarters when the economy still managed to grow. Germany's PMIs provided a positive surprise, with the composite PMI rising to 52.5, driven by gains in both services and manufacturing. However, a sharp drop in the services employment index raises concerns, making labour market developments key to watch.
In the US, January flash PMIs were in line with expectations, with composite PMI at 52.8 (prior: 52.7). Services price indices continued to moderate, with little change in employment indices. Manufacturing showed a modest improvement in new orders (50.8 from 49.1), though export orders weakened further (47.3 from 49.1).
The final University of Michigan consumer survey indicated that 1-year inflation expectations softened to 4.0% in January, down from the preliminary estimate of 4.2%. While this represents the lowest level since January 2025, it remains significantly higher than the 3.3% recorded at that time. Additionally, consumer confidence improved further in the final January release. The combination of higher confidence and slightly lower inflation expectations is likely to be viewed positively by the Fed.
In Sweden, employment grew more than expected in Q4, rising by 0.6% q/q. However, unemployment remains elevated and rose unexpectedly to 9.1% in Q4, driven by a higher-than-anticipated number of individuals entering the labour market. Indicators suggest that labour demand continues to improve, pointing to potential significant progress for the labour market this year. While the strong employment growth underscores ongoing improvements, Friday's high unemployment figures could prompt the Riksbank to adopt a cautious stance on labour market prospects in its upcoming announcement.
Equities: The tariff relief proved short-lived in equity markets, with most indices fading to unchanged closes on Friday. As a result, the earlier tariff-driven sell-off has not yet been fully retraced. Value cyclicals like industrials and financials that would typically bounce as politics de-risk, declined ~1% on Friday. Global small caps, which have performed strongly year-to-date, surprisingly lost momentum on Friday, with the Russell 2000 slipping nearly 2% on Friday. Meanwhile, US mega-cap technology stocks were mostly higher ahead of this week's earnings releases, reversing the recent small caps versus big tech trade.
FI and FX: Broad USD posted its largest weekly decline since May last week. USD/JPY starts the week around 154 following Friday's possible intervention by Japanese authorities, and EUR/USD looks to have 1.19 in sight. Scandies continues to benefit from the broad USD weakness, but strategy-wise we still view the latest declines in EUR/SEK and EUR/NOK both as temporary. US yields ended the week more or less unchanged, whereas European rates closed higher. This week's main event is the Federal Reserve meeting on Wednesday, where the FOMC is widely expected to take a pause in the easing cycle, which is also our call.
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
Log In
Sign Up