The new week of September will bring in tow decisions on the interest rates from the Banks of England and Canada, as well as a flow of important macroeconomic reports. At the beginning of the week, investors will have a chance to have a rest from raging market volatility but later on, they will have to put themselves together not to miss the most interesting things.
The beginning of this week of August is calm and extremely quiet: nothing new on the macroeconomic calendar, the news flow is smooth. However, the information is going to become more and more topical, while the rates of currencies and assets will fluctuate more actively.
Another week of August will offer a lot of statistics from Europe, the USA, and the United Kingdom, as well as plenty of doubts and enthusiasm about the outlook for oil demand. All this will be interesting, to say the least.
The USA reported on the labor market, which means it’s high time to expect new data from other, equally important global economies.
The end of July turned out to be extremely volatile for capital markets. August is traditionally considered a troublesome and unpredictable month for finance and assets; nonetheless, the beginning of the month may let us pause and make our thoughts clear.
The new week of July will be full of statistics, news from global Central Banks and, perhaps, fresh OPEC+ information. Miss volatility? It seems to be at the door.
Another week of July is already here, and the expectations are neutral. It offers statistics – but not fatal, actions of Central banks – but predictable, and news – but pretty stable. It is high time to breathe out and relax a bit unless the news flow brings up something unexpected.
The new week when June ends and July begins, will be full of statistics, influencing the currency market. The coronavirus is showing itself again – hence, there will be no room for boredom.
The oil cartel is keeping capital markets positive, while the labor market in the USA demonstrates hidden power. There is little that can spoil the investors' mood except for the overbought state of the market. In the new week, market players may go on buying until they decide that things are getting too expensive.
This week, the statistics receive all the attention. It will be abundant but investors will not necessarily react to every publication.
Well, here we have yet another week of April; this month has become a mock vacation for the majority of citizens, a disaster for a large number of businesses, a revelation of a row of economic problems. Not much has changed since last week. However, there is good news: outside is spring, and summer is coming. Judging by the Chinese experience, the quarantine will come to its end someday, and life will get back to normal.
The beginning of March is quite a lively time for investors - as always, in fact. We are expecting the meeting of OPEC where important decisions are to be made, talks inside Brexit, and lots of statistics. Enjoy.
The last week of January will be at least interesting: Brexit is coming, though it was hard to believe we will ever see it. The Fed will make its decision about the rate, as well as the Bank of England.
The new week is unlikely to become something remarkable for capital markets, as long as no new drivers or catalysts are going to appear, but investors are not going to be bored either.
The new week of January looks quite usual. We have the statistics, politics, as well as a few monetary decisions. It seems that global economies and capital markets are working full-scale after the Christmas and New Year holidays.