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Economische Agenda
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Datum (GMT+1) Land Ereignis Für Einheit Wicht. Tage. Vorsch. Vorher.
Economic Calendar
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Date Curr. Event Imp. Act. Cons. Prev.  
06 Feb 00:00 JP JPY Machine Tool Orders (YoY) 17.4% Tracks trends in machine tool orders placed by major manufacturers in Japan . Machine Tool Orders is considered a leading indicator of business capital spending, and increases are indicative of stronger business confidence and a better future outlook. Higher capital spending is also positive for the Japanese employment situation, as companies will generally require new employees to run and maintain new machinery.

The Machine Tool Orders figure tracks closely with the Machine Orders figure put out by the Economic and Social Research Institute, but tend to affect the market more since it is released nearly a month earlier.

Description

06 Feb 00:00 JP Tokyo Avg Office Vacancies (%) 9.01 06 Feb 00:30 AU AUD ANZ Job Advertisements (MoM) -0.9% Description
06 Feb 00:30 AU AUD Retail Sales Ex Inflation(QoQ) 0.6% 0.6% Description
06 Feb 00:30 AU AUD Retail Sales s.a. (MoM) 0.2% 0.0% here
Measure of the total sales of goods and services by retail stores in Australia. Retail Sales is an important measure of consumer spending and inflationary pressures in Australia. Steady increases in retail sales apply significant inflationary pressures to consumer prices. With Retail Trade being the foremost indicator for consumer spending, this figure is extremely important in understanding Australia’s economy. The headline number percentage change in Retail Sales from that of the previous month

Description

06 Feb 08:00 CH Foreign Currency Reserves 254.2B 06 Feb 09:30 EU EUR Euro-Zone Sentix Investor Confidence -16.5 -21.1 Although investor confidence might be down, the Euro remains strong after Merkel-Sarkozy deal and positive US job data. French and Italian numbers better than expected…
06 Feb 11:00 EU EUR German Factory Orders n.s.a. (YoY) -0.4% -4.3% Description
06 Feb 11:00 EU EUR German Factory Orders s.a. (MoM) 1.0% -4.8% Description
06 Feb 13:55 US Fed’s Bullard Speaks on Inflation Targeting in Chicago 06 Feb 15:00 CA Ivey Purchasing Managers Index s.a. 57 63.5 06 Feb 17:15 US Fed’s Fisher Speaks on Economy in Washington 06 Feb 21:45 NZ Average Hourly Earnings (QoQ) 0.5% 1.3% 06 Feb 21:45 NZ Labor Cost Private Sector (QoQ) 0.5% 0.5% 06 Feb 21:45 NZ Private Wages ex Overtime (QoQ) 0.5% 0.5% 06 Feb 22:30 AU AiG Performance of Construction Index 41 07 Feb 00:00 GB New Car Registrations (YoY) -3.7% 07 Feb 00:01 GB GBP BRC Sales Like-For-Like (YoY) -0.8% 2.2% here!
07 Feb 03:30 AU AUD Reserve Bank of Australia Rate Decision 4.0% 4.25% here


AUD Reserve Bank of Australia Rate Decision

The Reserve Bank of Australia ’s Cash Rate Target decision has a huge influence on its financial markets. Changes in rates affect interest rates in consumer loans, mortgages, and bond rates. Since short term interest rates essentially reflect the return on holding a currency, rate decisions usually affect the exchange rate of the Australian Dollar. Increases in rates or even expectations for increases tend to cause the Australian Dollar to appreciate, while rate decreases cause the currency to depreciate.

Description

07 Feb 05:00 AU Foreign Reserves (Australian dollar) A$46.1B 07 Feb 05:00 JP JPY Coincident Index 93.1 90.3 Measures the current economic activity based on a composite of indicators that track current business conditions in Japan . The headline number is derived by comparing the number of expanding indicators to the total number of indicators used. A headline number reading of 50% means that half of the available indicators are expanding.

Included in the index are; the expansion or contraction of industrial production, capacity utilization, retail and wholesale sales, power consumption, non-scheduled work hours, the job-offer rate and operating profits.

Description

07 Feb 05:00 JP JPY Leading Index 93.8 93.2 A composite of 12 major leading indices for Japan . Movements in these indicators are known to precede larger developments in the rest of the economy. The Index includes account inventory ratios, machinery orders, stock prices and other leading economic indicators. As the aggregate of many leading indices the Leading Economic Index provides a forecast of the future state of the domestic economy and is thought to predict activity A48that will occur 6-9 months after the reporting period. The index operates on a 1-100 scale, where a value lower than 50 means that most indictors are negative and a value higher than 50 means most indicators are positive. In both cases a greater distance from the midpoint (50) means that the indicators are more strongly positive or negative.

Description

07 Feb 07:45 EU French Trade Balance (euros) -5350M -4412M 07 Feb 11:00 EU EUR German Industrial Production n.s.a. and w.d.a. (YoY) 4.4% 3.6% Description
07 Feb 11:00 EU EUR German Industrial Production s.a. (MoM) 0.0% -0.6% Description
07 Feb 13:30 CA CAD Building Permits (MoM) -3.6% Description
07 Feb 20:00 US USD Consumer Credit $7.000B $20.374B Consumer Credit in the U.S. Falls Unexpectedly, Adding Volatility
07 Feb 23:30 AU AUD Westpac Consumer Confidence 2.4% Description
07 Feb 23:30 AU AUD Westpac Consumer Confidence Index 97.1 Read DailyFX’s commentary here!
07 Feb 23:50 JP JPY Adjusted Current Account Total (Yen) ¥625.3B ¥480.4B The Japanese current account balance, called the Current Account Total, summarizes the flow of goods, services, income and transfers in and out of Japan . The Current Account is more expansive than the trade balance as it also includes transfer payments, such as foreign aid, and income flows, which are the returns on investments in foreign assets. Nonetheless, the most significant component of the Japanese current account is the trade balance figure. Japan has historically had an export oriented economy and has relied on exports as the engine for overall economic expansion. Today still, trade surpluses form the foundation of consistent Japanese current account surpluses.

The Current Account is useful as a measure of net international trade flows, which directly affect currency values. A current account surplus reflects Yen flowing into Japan and this puts pressure on Yen to appreciate. On the contrary, a current account deficit means that more Yen are leaving the country from these sources, and this exerts downward pressure on the Yen.

Description

07 Feb 23:50 JP JPY Bank Lending Banks ex-Trust 0.50% The value of all outstanding loans with Japanese banks. Bank lending is important because lending increases with increased business confidence and investment. It is particularly insightful for the Japanese economy because of the weakness that has plagued the Japanese banking sector. The headline number is for total loans and discounts and is a percentage change from the previous year.

Description

07 Feb 23:50 JP JPY Bank Lending incl Trusts (YoY) 0.6% 0.40% The value of all outstanding loans with Japanese banks. Bank lending is important because lending increases with increased business confidence and investment. It is particularly insightful for the Japanese economy because of the weakness that has plagued the Japanese banking sector. The headline number is for total loans and discounts and is a percentage change from the previous year.

Description

07 Feb 23:50 JP Current Account Balance (YoY) -71.2% -85.5% 07 Feb 23:50 JP JPY Current Account Total (Yen) ¥340.1B ¥138.5B The Japanese current account balance, called the Current Account Total, summarizes the flow of goods, services, income and transfers in and out of Japan . The Current Account is more expansive than the trade balance as it also includes transfer payments, such as foreign aid, and income flows, which are the returns on investments in foreign assets. Nonetheless, the most significant component of the Japanese current account is the trade balance figure. Japan has historically had an export oriented economy and has relied on exports as the engine for overall economic expansion. Today still, trade surpluses form the foundation of consistent Japanese current account surpluses. The Current Account is useful as a measure of net international trade flows, which directly affect currency values. A current account surplus reflects Yen flowing into Japan and this puts pressure on Yen to appreciate. On the contrary, a current account deficit means that more Yen are leaving the country from these sources, and this exerts downward pressure on the Yen.

Description

07 Feb 23:50 JP JPY Trade Balance – BOP Basis (Yen) -Â¥585.1B Japanese Yen Littled Budged on Widely-Expected Trade Deficit
JPY Trade Balance – BOP Basis (Yen)

The difference between the total value of exports and the total value of imports. A positive figure indicates a trade surplus while a negative value represents a trade deficit. Because Japan ’s economy is highly export-led, trade data can give critical insight into developments in Japan ’s economy and changes into foreign exchange rates. A surplus reflects capital flowing into Japan in exchange for Japanese exports, and a deficit means that capital is flowing out of Japan as imports are purchased in larger volumes by Japanese consumers. A trade surplus will act as an appreciating weight on the Yen, whereas a trade deficit will place downward pressure on the Yen’s value. Details in the Trade Balance report itself give useful insight into changing trends regarding Japanese trade. Such developments are especially important for the country, which is an export-oriented economy that has historically experienced large trade surpluses. Any affect on this could have dramatic affect on the domestic economy.

Description

08 Feb 00:00 EU EUR German Wholesale Price Index (MoM) 0.0% Description
08 Feb 00:00 EU EUR German Wholesale Price Index (YoY) 3.0% Description
08 Feb 00:00 JP JPY Eco Watchers Survey: Current 47.4 47 The Economy Watchers Survey asks business-cycle sensitive workers their thoughts on existing and future economic conditions, giving a detailed picture of economic trends in Japan . The survey is based on questionnaires from ‘man on the street’ sectors that are particularly vulnerable to business cycle turns. These segments of the economy include sectors such as retail, restaurant service, and taxi driving. With this combined data the Japanese Eco Watchers report serves as both a consumer confidence indicator and a leading indicator for the rest of the economy. The report is usually released less than two weeks after the reporting month, thus its statistics are usually very timely. The headline number is released where 50 represents the center midpoint line of boom/bust sentiment.

Description

08 Feb 00:00 JP JPY Eco Watchers Survey: Outlook 45.5 44.4 The Economy Watchers Survey asks business-cycle sensitive workers their thoughts on existing and future economic conditions, giving a detailed picture of economic trends in Japan . The survey is based on questionnaires from ‘man on the street’ sectors that are particularly vulnerable to business cycle turns. These segments of the economy include sectors such as retail, restaurant service, and taxi driving. With this combined data the Japanese Eco Watchers report serves as both a consumer confidence indicator and a leading indicator for the rest of the economy. The report is usually released less than two weeks after the reporting month, thus its statistics are usually very timely. The headline number is released where 50 represents the center midpoint line of boom/bust sentiment.

Description

08 Feb 00:01 JP BRC Shop Price Index (YoY) 1.7% 08 Feb 06:45 CH CHF Unemployment Rate 3.5% 3.3% Follow this event LIVE on DailyFX here
The percent of unemployed persons in the labor force. The labor force is the aggregate of employed and unemployed persons. The rate is released as both a seasonally adjusted and unadjusted figure. The seasonally adjusted number is a key indictor of Swiss labor market conditions, significant because of its timeliness and overall market impact. High unemployment translates to lower average wages and reduced consumer spending. As consumer spending is the majority of total expenditure, rising unemployment often leads to slow economic growth. In addition, high or rising unemployment puts downward pressure on interest rates and leads to a depreciating Franc

Description

08 Feb 06:45 CH CHF Unemployment Rate s.a. 3.1% 3.1% Follow this event LIVE on DailyFX here
The percent of unemployed persons in the labor force. The labor force is the aggregate of employed and unemployed persons. The rate is released as both a seasonally adjusted and unadjusted figure. The seasonally adjusted number is a key indictor of Swiss labor market conditions, significant because of its timeliness and overall market impact. High unemployment translates to lower average wages and reduced consumer spending. As consumer spending is the majority of total expenditure, rising unemployment often leads to slow economic growth. In addition, high or rising unemployment puts downward pressure on interest rates and leads to a depreciating Franc

Description

08 Feb 07:00 EU EUR German Current Account (euros) 15.2B 14.3B Description
08 Feb 07:00 EU EUR German Exports s.a. (MoM) -1.0% 2.5% Goods and services produced domestically that are sold or awaiting sale outside of Germany . The headline number is the percentage change in the Exports value. The value of Exports is an important input in calculations of the Trade Balance, the Current Account and GDP. Exports are rarely considered in isolation. Rather, they are most often analyzed in comparison to Imports. Generally, excess exports indicate a country’s goods are seen as desirable abroad, which signals that this country’s currency is relatively weak (cheap) compared to that of its trading partners and may appreciate in the future due to robust demand

Description

08 Feb 07:00 EU EUR German Imports s.a. (MoM) 1.0% -0.4% Description
08 Feb 07:00 EU EUR German Trade Balance (euros) 13.7B 16.2B Description
08 Feb 07:30 EU Bank of France Business Sentiment 96 96 08 Feb 07:45 EU French Central Government Balance (euros) -90.8B -97.2B 08 Feb 13:15 CA CAD Housing Starts 191.5K 200.2K Description
08 Feb 15:30 US Fed’s Williams Speaks on Economy in San Ramon LOW 08 Feb 15:40 US Fed’s Williams Speaks in San Ramon LOW 08 Feb 21:45 NZ NZD Employment Change (QoQ) 0.4% 0.2% here

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08 Feb 21:45 NZ NZD Employment Change (YoY) 1.9% 1.1% Read DailyFX’s commentary here

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08 Feb 21:45 NZ NZD Participation Rate (QoQ) 68.5% 68.40% Read DailyFX’s commentary here

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08 Feb 21:45 NZ NZD Unemployment Rate 6.5% 6.6% Read DailyFX’s commentary here

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08 Feb 23:50 JP Foreign Buying Japan Bonds (Yen) 08 Feb 23:50 JP Foreign Buying Japan Stocks (Yen) ¥38.5B 08 Feb 23:50 JP Housing Loans (YoY) 2.10% 08 Feb 23:50 JP Japan Buying Foreign Bonds (Yen) ¥1155.3B 08 Feb 23:50 JP Japan Buying Foreign Stocks (Yen) 08 Feb 23:50 JP Japan Money Stock M2+CD (YoY) 3.1% 3.1% 08 Feb 23:50 JP Japan Money Stock M3 (YoY) 2.6% 2.6% 08 Feb 23:50 JP JPY Machine Orders (MoM) -5.0% 14.8% The total value of machinery orders placed at major manufacturers in Japan . Machine Orders is considered the best leading indicator of business capital spending, and increases are indicative of stronger business confidence and a better forward outlook. Higher capital spending is also positive for the Japanese employment situation, as companies will generally require new employees to run new machinery. The headline figure is the seasonally-adjusted month-on-month and annualized percentage change.

Description

08 Feb 23:50 JP JPY Machine Orders (YoY) 8.5% 12.5% The total value of machinery orders placed at major manufacturers in Japan . Machine Orders is considered the best leading indicator of business capital spending, and increases are indicative of stronger business confidence and a better forward outlook. Higher capital spending is also positive for the Japanese employment situation, as companies will generally require new employees to run new machinery. The headline figure is the seasonally-adjusted month-on-month and annualized percentage change.

Description

09 Feb 01:30 CN CNY Consumer Price Index (YoY) 4.0% 4.1% Australian, NZ Dollars Dip Slightly on Higher-Than-Expected Chinese CPI
09 Feb 01:30 CN CNY Producer Price Index (YoY) 0.7% 1.7% Australian, NZ Dollars Dip Slightly on Higher-Than-Expected Chinese CPI
09 Feb 05:00 JP JPY Consumer Confidence 38.5 38.9 Consumer confidence is a measure of popular sentiment concerning the Japanese economy. The figure is derived from a survey that asks thousands of Japanese consumers about personal expenditure patterns and inflationary expectations. In general, rising consumer confidence precedes increased consumer spending, which drives both economic growth and inflation. Even though t he Japanese economy is heavily driven by its export sector, domestic consumer confidence is an important gauge of overall economic activity and future inflationary pressures.

Description

09 Feb 06:45 CH SECO Consumer Confidence -22 -24 09 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Industrial Production (MoM) 0.2% -0.7% Description
09 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Industrial Production (YoY) -3.1% -3.1% Description
09 Feb 09:30 GB Manufacturing Production (MoM) 0.2% -0.2% 09 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Manufacturing Production (YoY) 0.3% -0.6% DailyFX Insight: UK Production Rebounds From Horrific April Numbers; Economic Weakness Remains
09 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Total Trade Balance (Pounds) -£2700 -£2566 Description
09 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Trade Balance Non EU (Pounds) -£5000 -£5021 Description
09 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Visible Trade Balance (Pounds) -£8600 -£8644 Description
09 Feb 12:00 GB GBP Bank of England Rate Decision 0.50% 0.50% Description
09 Feb 12:00 GB GBP BOE Asset Purchase Target 325B 275B DailyFX Insight: Bank of England Surprises Market With Large Expansion to Asset Purchase Plan
09 Feb 12:45 EU EUR European Central Bank Rate Decision 1.00% 1.00% http://www.fxwords.com/e/ecb-rate-announcement-and-press-conference-euro-zone.html
09 Feb 13:30 CA New Housing Price Index (YoY) 2.5% 09 Feb 15:00 GB GBP NIESR Gross Domestic Product Estimate 0.1% Description
09 Feb 15:00 US USD Wholesale Inventories 0.5% 0.1% The stock of unsold goods held by wholesalers. Wholesalers act as intermediaries between manufacturers or importers, and retailers. Wholesalers sell directly to retailers, who strive to act in accordance (ideally) with consumer demand. Consequently, high Wholesale Inventories indicate that unsold goods are piling up, suggesting that retailers are facing lagging consumer demand and unwilling to purchase goods. Conversely, declining Wholesale Inventories suggest retailers are buying more goods to meet strong or rising demand. Because Wholesale Inventories reflect the demand retailers have for their manufacturers’ wares, the report offers an early indication of the potential strength of consumer spending.

Description

09 Feb 21:45 NZ NZD NZ Card Spending (MoM) 0.5% -0.2% Read DailyFX’s commentary here!
09 Feb 21:45 NZ NZD NZ Card Spending – Retail (MoM) 0.5% -0.3% here!
09 Feb 23:50 JP JPY Domestic Corporate Goods Price Index (MoM) 0.1% 0.1% The Domestic Corporate Goods Price Index measures prices for goods purchased by Japanese corporations. As prices for input materials and the overall cost of manufacturing change, companies adjust retail prices accordingly. The CGPI comprehensively tracks these supply-side price pressures and increases in the index often precede upward movement in the CPI. If an increase in the CGPI is followed by a rise in the CPI, concerns about inflation may prompt the Bank of Japan to raise interest rates. The headline numbers are the percentage change in the index month or month and annually.

Description

09 Feb 23:50 JP JPY Domestic Corporate Goods Price Index (YoY) 0.8% 1.3% The Domestic Corporate Goods Price Index measures prices for goods purchased by Japanese corporations. As prices for input materials and the overall cost of manufacturing change, companies adjust retail prices accordingly. The CGPI comprehensively tracks these supply-side price pressures and increases in the index often precede upward movement in the CPI. If an increase in the CGPI is followed by a rise in the CPI, concerns about inflation may prompt the Bank of Japan to raise interest rates. The headline numbers are the percentage change in the index month or month and annually.

Description

10 Feb 00:00 CN CNY Exports (YoY) 0.2% 13.4% Read DailyFX’s commentary here!
10 Feb 00:00 CN CNY Imports (YoY) 0.5% 11.8% Read DailyFX’s commentary here!
10 Feb 00:00 CN CNY Trade Balance (USD) $8.30B $16.52B Read DailyFX’s commentary here!

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10 Feb 00:30 AU Reserve Bank Board Statement on Monetary Policy 10 Feb 07:00 EU EUR German Consumer Price Index – EU Harmonised (MoM) -0.5% -0.5% Description
10 Feb 07:00 EU EUR German Consumer Price Index – EU Harmonised (YoY) 2.3% 2.3% Description
10 Feb 07:45 EU EUR French Current Account (euros) -2.3B Description
10 Feb 07:45 EU EUR French Industrial Production (MoM) -0.8% 1.1% Description
10 Feb 07:45 EU EUR French Industrial Production (YoY) -0.6% 0.9% Description
10 Feb 07:45 EU French Manufacturing Production (MoM) -1.0% 1.3% 10 Feb 07:45 EU French Manufacturing Production (YoY) 0.9% 2.2% 10 Feb 08:15 CH CHF Consumer Price Index (MoM) -0.3% -0.2% It is the key gauge for inflation in Switzerland . Simply put, inflation reflects a decline in the purchasing power of the Franc, where each Franc buys fewer goods and services. The CPI calculates the change in the price of a predetermined basket of consumer goods and services. This basket represents the goods and services that an average household will purchase. The figure is compared to those of the previous month as well as the previous year in order to gauge changes to the costs of living on a month to month and year to year basis. The headline number is the percentage change either from the previous month’s value or the previous year’s value. As the key indicator of inflation, a rising CPI may prompt the Swiss National Bank to raise interest rates in attempt to manage inflation and slow economic growth. Higher interest rates make holding the Franc more attractive to foreign investors, and this higher level of demand will place upward pressure on the value of the Franc.

Description

10 Feb 08:15 CH CHF Consumer Price Index (YoY) -0.7% -0.7% It is the key gauge for inflation in Switzerland . Simply put, inflation reflects a decline in the purchasing power of the Franc, where each Franc buys fewer goods and services. The CPI calculates the change in the price of a predetermined basket of consumer goods and services. This basket represents the goods and services that an average household will purchase. The figure is compared to those of the previous month as well as the previous year in order to gauge changes to the costs of living on a month to month and year to year basis. The headline number is the percentage change either from the previous month’s value or the previous year’s value. As the key indicator of inflation, a rising CPI may prompt the Swiss National Bank to raise interest rates in attempt to manage inflation and slow economic growth. Higher interest rates make holding the Franc more attractive to foreign investors, and this higher level of demand will place upward pressure on the value of the Franc.

Description

10 Feb 08:15 CH CPI – EU Harmonised (MoM) 0.3% 10 Feb 08:15 CH CPI – EU Harmonised (YoY) -0.4% 10 Feb 09:00 EU Italian Industrial Production n.s.a. (YoY) -7.2% -4.1% 10 Feb 09:00 EU Italian Industrial Production s.a. (MoM) -0.5% 0.3% 10 Feb 09:00 EU Italian Industrial Production w.d.a. (YoY) -4.1% 10 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Producer Price Index Input n.s.a. (MoM) 0.2% -0.6% Description
10 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Producer Price Index Input n.s.a. (YoY) 6.8% 8.7% Description
10 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Producer Price Index Output Core n.s.a. (MoM) 0.0% -0.1% Description
10 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Producer Price Index Output Core n.s.a. (YoY) 2.3% 3.0% Description
10 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Producer Price Index Output n.s.a. (MoM) 0.1% -0.2% Description
10 Feb 09:30 GB GBP Producer Price Index Output n.s.a. (YoY) 3.7% 4.8% Description
10 Feb 13:30 CA CAD International Merchandise Trade (Canadian dollar) 0.65B 1.07B Negative International Merchandise Trade (deficit) indicates that imports of goods are greater than exports. When exports are greater than imports, Canada experiences a trade surplus. Trade surpluses indicate that funds are coming into Canada in exchange for exported goods. Because such exported goods are usually purchased with Canadian dollars, trade surpluses usually reflect currency flowing into Canada, such currency inflows may lead to a natural appreciation of a the Canadian dollar, unless countered by similar capital outflows (Canadian International Securities Transactions tracks such capital flows). At a bare minimum, surpluses will buoy the value of the currency. There are a number of factors that work to diminish the market impact of Canadian Merchandise Trade on markets. The report is not very timely, released about three months after the reporting quarter. Developments in many of the components that comprise the figure are also usually well anticipated. Lastly, since the report reflect data for a specific reporting quarter, any significant changes in the Merchandise Trade should plausibly have been already felt during that quarter and not during the release of data. But because of the overall significance of Trade on Foreign Exchange Rates, the figure has a history of being one of the more important reports out of Canada . The headline figure for trade balance is expressed in millions of Canadian dollars and usually accompanied by a year-on-year percentage change figure

Description

10 Feb 13:30 US USD Trade Balance -$48.4B -$47.8B Description
10 Feb 14:55 US USD U. of Michigan Confidence 74 75 Description
10 Feb 19:00 US Monthly Budget Statement -$62.5B -$49.8B Wij willen erop wijzen dat Forexinvestor kan niet verantwoordelijk worden gehouden voor eventuele verliezen bijbehorende akten, die worden uitgevoerd uit de inhoud van deze website.

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