The new week of February, apart from freezing and nasty weather (which is explainable), will bring in tow a flow of statistics from the USA and Great Britain, as well as the minutes of the sessions of the ECB and Fed. No steep turns are expected here, however, you never know in advance.
The first week of February will provide some understanding of the US employment sector, which is important for evaluating the perspectives of planned stimulation; also, we will see the results of some Central banks’ sessions. On the whole, no surprises are expected on either side – this means that the current state of affairs in the currency market can stay without change.
This new week of January is unlikely to be eventful: the market has just got a whole load of news and is busy analyzing it. Oil is pricey, the risk seems appealing, and the nearest future does not look complicated.
One shouldn’t expect a Pre-New Year week to be feverish or volatile: everything that had to happen has already happened. It’s time to take a break to save strengths and come back to financial markets in the New Year as fresh as paint.
It is unlikely that this Christmas week, the last full week of this weird year will surprise us with some breakthroughs or drastic changes. Let us just celebrate the Catholic Christmas and hope that the elves are in good mood.
Central banks of the world are ready for new conferences and discussions of their credit and monetary policy, statistics keep being published, and the market is still excited with the risk and neglects the overbought state of currencies.
The new week that winds up autumn and gives way to winter is going to be eventful: we will enjoy, statistics, meetings of Central banks, and an OPEC meeting. The market will definitely find lots of footholds.
As we approaching the end of the year, investors are growing more tired; however, the situation around gives no chance for a coffee break. The new week is bringing along statistics and events alike, we will not get bored, for sure.
The tide of statistics can hardly knock investors down in the middle of the month, but reports are becoming more and more interesting, this week no exclusion.
Capital markets are ruled by volatility. The USA are enjoying new President but this is just the top of the iceberg. We expect statistics, meetings of Central banks, and, of course, political events.
The new week of October promises to be interesting: it features statistics, the monthly oil market OPEC report, and the US presidential election campaign. This autumn can be called anything but boring.
The first month of autumn-2020 is nearly over, and it only confirms the uniqueness and unpredictability of this year. The market is gradually focusing on the US policy statistics, though the coronavirus remains a mighty depressing factor that corrects market fluctuations.
It seems we have already heard the brightest and most effective news of September – both from the macroeconomic calendar and the leading Central banks. However, this does not mean that we will get bored this week.
This week belongs to Central banks – almost every day capital markets will take a look at some of the key regulators and consider its decisions about credit and monetary policy. No steep turns are expected – time has not come for those – but volatility promises to be high.