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












Signal Accounts for Members
All Signal Accounts
All Contests



France Trade Balance (SA) (Oct)A:--
F: --
Euro Zone Employment YoY (SA) (Q3)A:--
F: --
Canada Part-Time Employment (SA) (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
Canada Unemployment Rate (SA) (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
Canada Full-time Employment (SA) (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
Canada Labor Force Participation Rate (SA) (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
Canada Employment (SA) (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. PCE Price Index MoM (Sept)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Personal Income MoM (Sept)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Core PCE Price Index MoM (Sept)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. PCE Price Index YoY (SA) (Sept)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Core PCE Price Index YoY (Sept)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Personal Outlays MoM (SA) (Sept)A:--
F: --
U.S. 5-10 Year-Ahead Inflation Expectations (Dec)A:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures MoM (Sept)A:--
F: --
U.S. Weekly Total Rig CountA:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Weekly Total Oil Rig CountA:--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Consumer Credit (SA) (Oct)A:--
F: --
China, Mainland Foreign Exchange Reserves (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
Japan Trade Balance (Oct)A:--
F: --
P: --
Japan Nominal GDP Revised QoQ (Q3)A:--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland Imports YoY (CNH) (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland Exports (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland Imports (CNH) (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland Trade Balance (CNH) (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland Exports YoY (USD) (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland Imports YoY (USD) (Nov)A:--
F: --
P: --
Germany Industrial Output MoM (SA) (Oct)A:--
F: --
Euro Zone Sentix Investor Confidence Index (Dec)A:--
F: --
P: --
Canada National Economic Confidence IndexA:--
F: --
P: --
U.K. BRC Like-For-Like Retail Sales YoY (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
U.K. BRC Overall 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 12-Month Inflation (CPI) (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
Mexico Core CPI YoY (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
Mexico PPI YoY (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. Weekly Redbook Index YoY--
F: --
P: --
U.S. JOLTS Job Openings (SA) (Oct)--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland M1 Money Supply YoY (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland M0 Money Supply YoY (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland M2 Money Supply YoY (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. EIA Short-Term Crude Production Forecast For The Year (Dec)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. EIA Natural Gas Production Forecast For The Next Year (Dec)--
F: --
P: --
U.S. EIA Short-Term Crude Production Forecast For The Next Year (Dec)--
F: --
P: --
EIA Monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook
U.S. API Weekly Gasoline Stocks--
F: --
P: --
U.S. API Weekly Cushing Crude Oil Stocks--
F: --
P: --
U.S. API Weekly Crude Oil Stocks--
F: --
P: --
U.S. API Weekly Refined Oil Stocks--
F: --
P: --
South Korea Unemployment Rate (SA) (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
Japan Reuters Tankan Non-Manufacturers Index (Dec)--
F: --
P: --
Japan Reuters Tankan Manufacturers Index (Dec)--
F: --
P: --
Japan Domestic Enterprise Commodity Price Index MoM (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
Japan Domestic Enterprise Commodity Price Index YoY (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland PPI YoY (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
China, Mainland CPI MoM (Nov)--
F: --
P: --
Italy Industrial Output YoY (SA) (Oct)--
F: --
P: --


No matching data
Latest Views
Latest Views
Trending Topics
Top Columnists
Latest Update
White Label
Data API
Web Plug-ins
Affiliate Program
View All

No data
Asia-Pacific markets were set to climb Wednesday, after all three key benchmarks on Wall Street advanced overnight on optimism that U.S.-China trade tensions could ease.

That’s the setup right now. The situation has been building for weeks, and it’s getting worse. The US government is all over the place under Trump’s second term, and nobody trusts what’s coming next.
Investors have started dumping the dollar and US Treasurys, and the numbers show just how bad it’s gotten. The dollar index has fallen more than 9% this year. The latest Global Fund Manager Survey from Bank of America shows that 61% of managers expect the dollar to lose more value over the next 12 months.
That’s the worst sentiment these managers have had about the dollar in nearly two decades.
The greenback’s collapse has pushed other currencies higher, especially the so-called safe ones. The Japanese yen is up by more than 10% against the dollar this year while the Swiss franc and euro are each up by over 11%, according to data from LSEG at press time.
These surges sound nice, yes, but they’re actually a problem. A strong currency makes exports more expensive, and for countries that rely on selling stuff abroad, that’s a problem they don’t need right now.
The Mexican peso has surged by 5.5%, the Canadian dollar is up by over 4%, the Polish zloty climbed by more than 9%, and the Russian ruble jumped by a huge 22% against the dollar this year, LSEG’s data shows.
But not all currencies are rising. Some are crashing hard. The Vietnamese dong and Indonesian rupiah dropped to their lowest ever levels against the dollar this month. The Turkish lira also hit a fresh record low last week. Even China’s yuan, which dipped to a new low two weeks ago, has only barely bounced back.
Adam Button, who works as chief currency analyst at ForexLive, said the weakness of the dollar is something central banks have been waiting for. “Most central banks would be happy to see 10%-20% declines in the US dollar,” he said.
Button pointed out that dollar strength has been a pain in the ass for years, especially for countries that either peg to the dollar or have big dollar-denominated debts. When the dollar is weak, it lowers their repayment costs. It also helps kill off imported inflation, since a stronger local currency means cheaper imports. That gives central banks space to cut rates and try to get their economies moving again.
But that’s just the upside. Button said the other side of the coin is the problem with exports. A strong local currency makes a country’s goods more expensive in global markets. That’s especially bad in Asia, which handles most of the world’s manufacturing.
This is why countries like Indonesia are unlikely to slash rates anytime soon. Their currency is already too unstable. But places like India or South Korea might still have some space to cut. The problem is that once rates drop, investors might move their money into US assets chasing better yields, which triggers capital outflows.
Switzerland is in a league of its own. Button pointed out that 75% of Swiss GDP comes from exports, and a strong franc has been a nightmare for the last 15 years. During global panic, investors always run to the franc, pushing it even higher. If this keeps up, Button said Switzerland might have no choice but to devalue.
Some countries are using the window of falling inflation. The European Central Bank dropped rates by 25 basis points at its April meeting. They said inflation is falling toward their 2% goal, so they’ve got room.
The International Monetary Fund expects China and India — the world’s most populous countries — to play a bigger role driving the global economy, as it downgrades growth forecasts due to an escalating trade war.
The IMF cut its global projection for this year to 2.8% in the updated World Economic Outlook released Tuesday, down from the 3.3% it was expecting in January. The Fund’s team had to rapidly revise country forecasts due to high levels of uncertainty, after US President Donald Trump announced sweeping worldwide tariffs and then dialed some of them back, at least temporarily.
Compared to the forecasts it made in October, the IMF now expects a bigger share of growth to come from China and India, according to projections published this week based on purchasing power parity. Meanwhile, the expected contribution from the US was revised downward.
China will be the top contributor to global growth over the next five years, with a 23% share — up from 21.7% six months ago — according to Bloomberg calculations based on the IMF numbers published Tuesday. India is now expected to add more than 15% of additional output through 2030, while the US share drops to 11.3% from a prior estimate of 11.6%.
Global growth will remain concentrated, the IMF forecasts suggest, with some 80% of it coming from the top 25 countries.
Despite the lower projected US contribution, it’s still forecast to chip in a bigger share than the European Union — and the IMF sees that gap widening slightly on an annual basis in the coming years.
The South Asian nation is well-positioned to withstand ruptures to global trade. When Washington announced its harshest levies yet on dozens of countries this month, India was insulated from the ripple effects by its relatively small export base. Trump’s proposed tariff on Indian goods — 26% — was also far lower than those imposed on manufacturing rivals in Southeast Asia, like Vietnam, where the threat of a 46% import tax fueled panic through factories making products for American buyers.
As the US and other large economies stare at recessions, India’s economy is still expected to grow more than 6% — slower than last year, but still the fastest of other major nations, buffered in part by its massive domestic market of 1.4 billion people. The US has prioritized India in its trade negotiations, with Vice President JD Vance touching down in New Delhi this week, where he met with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
More broadly, as ties continue to fray between Washington and Beijing, India is using its relative strength to cast itself anew as the natural alternative for capital once bound for China — the next “factory to the world” and an emerging superpower that wants to play more of a role as global king-maker under Modi.
“That’s why we respect him,” Vance said on Tuesday. “He stands strong for India’s interests.”
That confidence reflects in India’s markets. Stocks and the rupee closed on Tuesday at their strongest level of 2025, and benchmark 10-year yields have hit a fresh three-year low. Last week, the benchmark NSE Nifty 50 Index erased all losses triggered by Trump’s announcement of so-called reciprocal tariffs, making India the first major stock market to recover — even if some of the rosiness is partly because a decline in share prices had taken place before Trump set off a slump in global equities in February.
Rahul Saraf, Citigroup Inc.’s head of investment banking in India, called the country “uniquely resilient” to the macro shocks of a new world order under Trump, pointing to the fairly unlevered balance sheets of local companies and a profusion of money with private equity firms and sovereign wealth funds ready to fund deals.
Over the past few weeks, as the trade war ripped at the seams of supply chains, India has already tried to pick up the pieces. Air India Ltd. is considering acquiring Boeing Co. planes rejected by Chinese carriers, according to people familiar with the matter. Alphabet Inc. is discussing shifting some of its global production of Google Pixel smartphones to India from Vietnam. And UBS Group AG is transferring its onshore wealth management to India’s 360 One WAM Ltd., a significant boost for the Swiss bank’s exposure in Asia.
For now, officials in the US and India also seem willing to overlook some of their historical differences, united by a desire to pull together as a check on Chinese dominance in the region. Modi and Trump have long enjoyed cordial personal ties, and the return of the Trump administration came as welcome news across much of New Delhi following the US leader’s defeat of Joe Biden in November.
Many in India’s government see in Trump a leader who would be easier to work with — less critical of India’s close ties with Russian President Vladimir Putin, and less demanding of accountability for its alleged involvement in extra-judicial killings of overseas activists.
“The strong relationship between India and the US cuts across all party lines,” said Manoranjan Sharma, chief economist of Infomerics Ratings. “Now that the US wants to distance itself from China, it’s natural that it will choose India as a partner.”
Months before the rollout of Trump’s levies, Modi’s tax bureaucracy was hard at work cutting tariffs on American bourbon, chemicals and cars. And unlike countries like Colombia, which responded with fury at the Trump administration’s deportations of undocumented migrants in shackles, India said it was the duty of all countries to combat illegal migration and accepted plane-loads of its migrants without complaint.
In a White House where getting meetings with the president and his top deputies is proving tricky for many world leaders, India has faced less pushback. Modi was among the first foreign leaders to visit Trump in February, when the two sides agreed to strike the first tranche of a bilateral trade deal by the fall. India is on a short list of countries the US is prioritizing negotiations with during Trump’s 90-day tariff pause, which ends in July.
Trump officials say the negotiations — which includes tariffs, but also Indian purchases of defense equipment and energy from the US — will be tough, and it’s unclear yet whether an agreement would allow India to escape the reciprocal duties.
However, Vance signaled this week that both sides had made “significant progress” toward the trade deal, with the broad outlines of a roadmap in place for further discussions.
Vance’s four-day trip — the first by a US vice president in over a decade — included dinner with Modi, touring Jaipur’s ancient sandstone forts with his family and visiting a sacred Hindu temple outside New Delhi. Days before his meeting with the vice president, Modi said he spoke with Trump aide and Tesla Inc. chief Elon Musk about potential areas of collaboration. If all goes to plan, Trump will also touch down in India in the coming months.
Even so, Trump 2.0 has been defined, at least so far, by its unpredictability. In the longer term, whether India succeeds in luring more business away from competitors will depend, partly, on how it plays its cards with the US. On the campaign trail in his first term, Trump frequently criticized India, calling it the “tariff king” and complaining that high trade barriers made it difficult for American companies like Harley-Davidson Inc. to do business on the subcontinent.
Arup Raha, the chief economist for Asia Pacific at Oxford Economics, cautioned against reading too much into the tea leaves. India’s historical weaknesses in manufacturing — whether from tough labor laws or paralyzing bureaucracy — mean that it’s unlikely to replace China as a manufacturing hub in the near-term.
Still, India has the right mix of strengths to make it a real player in today’s multipolar world, Raha said. In any case, there aren’t many better options out there.
“If you are looking for a large ally, that’s India,” he said.
Following this impressive milestone, analysts are turning to on-chain data to identify potential challenges ahead.
Based on insights from IntoTheBlock, experts have highlighted the next key area of resistance for Bitcoin, expected between $95,600 and $98,290.
According to on-chain data from IntoTheBlock, the next significant resistance area lies between $95,600 and $98,290. This level is marked by a large number of addresses that bought BTC at these price points, making them “out of the money” if the price moves beyond this range. These addresses could sell off their holdings, creating selling pressure that might hinder Bitcoin’s price action.

As Bitcoin reaches the $90,000 mark, the next challenge will be breaking through the $95,600 to $98,290 range.
READ MORE:

This key resistance zone could determine whether Bitcoin continues to climb or faces a correction. Traders are watching these levels closely, as breaking through them could signal further bullish movement, while rejection could signal a pullback.
The post Bitcoin: Next Key Area of Resistance After the Price Passed $90,000 appeared first on Coindoo.
In an EBW Analytics Group report sent to Rigzone by the EBW team today, Eli Rubin, an energy analyst at the company, said the May natural gas contract is “flirting with [the] $3.00 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) psychological level”.
“The May natural gas contract sank to $2.994 yesterday and closed at $3.016 - a year to date low,” Rubin noted in the report, adding that Henry Hub spot natural gas traded at $3.15 per MMBtu.
“While the $3.00 level may offer support, technicals indicate further weakness ahead,” Rubin warned in the report.
“However, maintenance on the Permian Highway pipeline could limit supplies to the Gulf Coast this week, sustained weather driven demand is possible into the weekend, and daily LNG feedgas nominations are up with recoveries at Sabine Pass and Plaquemines,” Rubin went on to state.
According to Rubin, fundamental catalysts aligning with the $3.00 benchmark could prevent further declines.
“Still, the emergence of storage surpluses and very weak spring fundamentals suggest deeper losses may continue,” Rubin said in the report.
“May-October contracts average $3.37 per MMBtu, and another 10 percent decline would put prices on a trajectory to reach the October five-year storage average of 3,753 billion cubic feet,” Rubin added.
“While the outlook for Cal 2026 increasingly appears underpriced, it could remain so for an extended period before eventually rising,” Rubin added.
In a separate EBW report sent to Rigzone by the EBW team yesterday, Rubin noted that the natural gas physical market was showing “signs of weakness”.
“The May natural gas contract flirted with the 200-day moving average at $3.21 per MMBtu repeatedly last week, but closed above the key benchmark every day,” Rubin highlighted in that report.
“As Henry Hub spot prices dropped below $3.00 over the weekend to a ten-week low, however, increasing bearish pressure may open the way for near to medium term declines,” Rubin warned.
“Further, support from last week’s cold is fading. By the end of week three, a 74 billion cubic foot storage deficit to five-year normals could flip to a 25 billion cubic foot surplus,” Rubin continued.
“LNG is softening at Sabine Pass. April production is almost 40 billion cubic feet per week higher year over year, although maintenance on Permian Highway Pipeline could limit supply later this week,” Rubin said.
Rubin went on to point out in that report that long-term contracts were “holding up relatively well”.
“Despite a 28.2 cent plunge in the May contract last week, 1Q2026 futures dipped 1.7 cents. Technical resistance may hold, but mounting fundamental pressure (triple-digit injections have not yet begun) suggests another leg lower over the next 30-45 days,” Rubin said.
The EBW team informed Rigzone that it did not publish an expanded edition of its report on Friday. In another EBW report sent to Rigzone on Thursday, Rubin highlighted that the May natural gas contract slid to a “fresh 10 week low”.
“The NYMEX front-month closed a hair under $3.25 per MMBtu yesterday, reaching the lowest levels since early February,” Rubin said in that report.
“Intraday trading again saw support at the 200-day moving average of $3.21 - but falling weather driven demand may continue to weigh on pricing. Henry Hub spot prices averaged $3.21,” Rubin added.
In this report, Rubin went on to warn that the outlook was weak over the next 30-45 days, “with projected triple-digit injections and a nascent storage surplus”.
“Forced selling over the past two weeks, however, creates a dynamic whereby longs are looking for signs of a firmer bottom to reestablish positions,” Rubin said.
“Winter 2025-26 gas futures already rose yesterday, for example, despite weakness at the front of the curve,” Rubin went on to state in that report.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) boosted its Henry Hub natural gas spot price forecast for 2025 and 2026 in its latest short term energy outlook (STEO), which was released on April 10.
According to its April STEO, the EIA now sees the Henry Hub spot price averaging $4.27 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) this year and $4.60 per MMBtu next year. In its previous STEO, which was released in March, the EIA saw the Henry Hub spot price averaging $4.19 per MMBtu in 2025 and $4.47 per MMBtu in 2026.
The EIA projected in its April STEO that the Henry Hub spot price will come in at $3.93 per MMBtu in the second quarter of 2025. In its March STEO, the EIA projected that the Henry Hub spot price would average $3.88 per MMBtu in the second quarter of this year.

BTC/USD 1-day chart. Source: Daan Crypto Trades/X

White Label
Data API
Web Plug-ins
Poster Maker
Affiliate Program
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
Log In
Sign Up