Take a deep breath. There are lots of figures today all over the globe. CBI Realized Sales in Britain, American Durable Goods Orders and New Home Sales stand out. And just before the day ends, there are lots of important figures in Japan. Ready? Let’s dive…
Global Events
North Korea continues to play dangerous games with the world: a third test has been conducted. Fears of war in the far east ignite risk aversion and help the US dollar.
Two oil-related events are due today: weekly Crude Oil Inventories are expected to stay unchanged. Bigger news will come from the OPEC meeting held in Vienna. A surprise could impact forex trading as well.
Economic Calendar
In New Zealand, the Annual Budget Release is will probably shock the kiwi. Remember what Alistair Darling did to the Pound?
Swiss Trade Balance is expected to show a shrinking surplus, from 150 million to 110 million.
In Europe, German Unemployment Change is a key figure for the whole continent. Watch the EUR/USD move. Also in Europe, Consumer Confidence is predicted to stay stable.
British CBI Realized Sales are a major figure for the Pound. They’re expected to turn negative, to -10.
British GfK Consumer Confidence is also due, late in the day. Expectations are for an easing – from -27 to -25. Read my special coverage for the British Pound: Pound at New Ground – What’s Next?
US Figures
American Core Durable Goods Orders are predicted to drop by 0.4%, less than last month’s fall. The non-Core figure is expected to rise by 0.1%.
At the same time, Unemployment Claims are published, and no news is expected – stability at around 630K is the consensus. The American job market has seen better days. For more about the greenback’s week, check out my post: : Contraction or Retraction?
An hour and a half later, New Home Sales are due – they’re expected to rise nicely to 363K, from 356K last month.
Near the end of the day, Building Consents will be published in New Zealand. If they continue falling, NZD/USD will be hurt.
Japanese influx of figures
Just before midnight GMT, there are lots of figures published in Japan: Household Spending is predicted to fall by 0.7%, Tokyo Core CPI is expected to show that prices went down, and so will the National Core CPI.
Japanese Unemployment Rate, despite being a late figure, will also have significant impact on USD/JPY. It’s expected to round upwards to 5%.
Last but not least, Japanese Prelim Industrial Production is expected to give some hope, rising by 3.3%. This might justify the cautious optimism that was heard lately from the BOJ.
That’s it. Happy forex trading!