Mon: Market Holiday: Japan (Autumnal Equinox); EZ, UK & US Flash PMIs (Sep), US National Activity Index (Aug) Tue: RBA Policy Announcement; German Ifo (Sep), US Consumer Confidence (Sep), Richmond Fed (Sep) Wed: Riksbank & CNB Policy Announcements; Australian CPI (Aug), US Building Permits Revision (Aug), New Home Sales (Aug), UK CBI Trends (Sep) Thu:
S&P Flash manufacturing PMI remains below 50.0 Prior PM Mfg 50.0 Flash Manufacturing PMI 49.4 vs 49.8 estimate Flash services PMI 50.8 vs 50.4 estimate ant 50.6 last month Composite 50.7 unchanged from last month 50.7. From S&P Global: In November, US businesses experienced a marginal expansion in output, similar to the growth rate seen
© Reuters. The is trading just below a key level of 104 today as investors await the afternoon release of PMI data that could influence the currency’s strength. The anticipated reports are expected to reveal a slight downturn in both the Manufacturing and Services sectors, with forecasts predicting figures of 49.8 and 50.4, respectively. A
© Reuters. The New Zealand dollar (NZD) saw an uptick today, approaching a key resistance level as global markets reacted to a mix of economic signals and political changes. The currency edged closer to the 200-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) benchmark of 0.6100, buoyed by a decline in oil prices and the formation of a
Share: US S&P Global Composite PMI held steady at 50.7 in November’s flash estimate. US Dollar Index stays in negative territory at around 103.50. The economic activity in the US private sector continued to expand at a modest pace in early November, with S&P Global Composite PMI holding steady at 50.7. The Manufacturing
O dollar operated at a high this session, recovering after a strong fall yesterday, with weakness in the euro and the pound after weaker than expected data in Europe, supporting the expectation of an end to interest rate hikes by the region’s central banks. The DXY index, which measures the dollar against a basket of strong currencies,
China’s smartphone exports fell 6.4% in the January to October period from a year earlier. exported 642 million smartphones in the 10 months ended Oct. 31 exports +10% y/y to 81.1 million in October alone Data comes via China’s General Administration of Customs in a report China state-owned media from Yicai Global, a financial news
We had a jam-packed economic calendar this week, and it seems like broad market behavior was once again mainly dictated by inflation updates and its influence on monetary policy sentiment. The main event stealing the spotlight was the U.S. CPI update, basically setting the vibe for the entire financial dance floor like a DJ—shaping