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  • Welcome to the Investors Trading Academy economic calendar of the week. Each week our news analysts

  • review the upcoming economic events that you should be monitoring. This week’s focus

  • will dead on the Federal Reserve decision due on Thursday afternoon. Most headlines

  • will center on comments about what to expect from the Fed. The Federal Reserve could raise

  • rates this month for the first time since 2006, although it is still not certain. All

  • other events and data take a back seat, even if they still carry a degree of weight, such

  • as UK unemployment data. It would be foolhardy to predict what will happen to asset prices,

  • since even no move could provoke volatility if the accompanying statement and press conference

  • provide hints about future policy. On Sunday the monthly batch of Chinese economic

  • indicators are released: retail sales, production and investment. There are signs that Chinese

  • economic activity is gaining pace and investors would want to see further confirmation of

  • that trend. Expect annual retail sales growth near 10.6

  • per cent with production near 6.3 per cent and investment near 11.2 per cent. The risk

  • is that the results print on the weaker side of expectations, especially given that China

  • closed down heavy manufacturers and restricted transport in Beijing due to the World Athletic

  • Championships. We would expect activity levels to lift in coming months.

  • In the US, the week kicks off on Tuesday with retail sales figures, industrial production

  • and the influential Empire state survey scheduled for release. Retail sales may have expanded

  • by a good, but not great, 0.4 per cent in August while the underlying (non-auto) measure

  • may have lifted by 0.3 per cent. The pull back in the 'flash' manufacturing index has

  • economists expecting that industrial production may have eased by 0.2 per cent in August after

  • the 0.6 per cent lift in July. On Wednesday the key consumer inflation figures

  • (the consumer price index) is released alongside the NAHB housing market index. The CPI for

  • August should once again show that headline inflation is rather tame. In July the consumer

  • price index rose 0.1 per cent to be up just 0.2 per cent over the year. Even stripping

  • out food & energy prices, the core CPI rose by a tame 0.1 per cent in July. Economists

  • tip the core CPI measure to fall by 0.1 per cent in August to be up 1.8 per cent over

  • the year. The US central bank policymaking group ,the

  • Federal Open Market Committee, meets over Wednesday and Thursday with the decision announced

  • at 4am Sydney time on Friday morning. The guessing game as to when the Fed will lift

  • rates may not be resolved -- the probability of the meeting deciding the first interest

  • rate rise in a decade -- is around 28 per cent. However, the text of the decision will

  • be important in determining whether the Fed is on course to lift rates in December.

  • The FOMC’s rate decision, policy statement and economic projections will be delivered

  • after late on the day on Thursday so markets will be able to react until Friday. Chair

  • Janet Yellen will also participate in her bi-meeting press conference following the

  • conclusion of the meeting.

Welcome to the Investors Trading Academy economic calendar of the week. Each week our news analysts

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本週經濟日曆--2015年9月14日至18日 (Economic Calendar Of The Week - September 14-18, 2015)

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    richardwang 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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