Indices represent standardised measurements to track the performance of a group of assets. The most popularly traded one are stock indices, as these are used by traders to diversify their portfolios and gain exposure to the stock market without the risks associated with individual stocks. If you are considering trading indices to strengthen your portfolio diversification or gain exposure to a specific stock market, here are the top 3 things you must know.
Economic data releases act as mirrors of the economic health of a nation. These events impact both trader sentiment and the financial market. As a result, they are among the most important factors affecting trading. Whether you are a swing trader, a scalper or an investor with a longer-term horizon, an economic calendar is a key tool in your arsenal. It is the list of all data releases (upcoming and completed) along with the information from the previous report and expectations for the one up next. Read on for a better understanding of these economic data releases and how to use them in popular trading strategies.
Often a country’s monetary policy is decided based on economic reports. Therefore, traders try to speculate market movements based on economic data releases.
These releases are related to what happened in a particular domain in the previous month, quarter, or year. Although they indicate what has already happened, they provide an insight into how the economy is going to perform in the future.
The top 5 lagging indicators are:
Did you know?
The US non-farm payroll (NFP) report, which is released on the first Friday of every month, is the single most impactful economic data release that affects almost all financial instruments across the globe.
These indicators suggest what to expect from consumer behaviour or the economy in general. Often referred to as input-oriented indicators, these data releases help traders plan their positions.
The top 5 leading indicators are:
Market action is a function of several factors, including the geopolitical atmosphere, the deviation of the actual values from the analyst estimates, and whether other indicators support or contradict a particular trend. Markets may act differently before, during, and after a data release.
Financial analysts and economic experts forecast a value for each release, considering diverse factors. Traders keep an eye on these predictions, as they are indicative of what experts believe is the condition of the economy and labour markets.
Markets can become volatile during a release. Trader sentiment is impacted by the divergence of the actual data from the forecast. The greater the deviation, the more traders are likely to change their trading decisions. A better-than-expected release supports market sentiment and favours riskier assets like stocks and indices. A disappointing release creates concern and favours safe-haven assets. Whatever the direction, a divergence increases market volatility, and is a time when scalpers and day traders are most active.
After the data is out, the markets may digest the news in different ways. For example, a high GDP number could mean inflation, signalling higher interest rate hikes by the central bank, which strengthens the currency. On the other hand, a good GDP number also supports risk assets, diverting funds from more stable to exotic currency pairs and stocks.
Did you know?
On February 23, 2023, the US reported a decline in weekly jobless claims by 3,000 to 192,000, versus market expectations of 200,000. The better-than-expected data sent gold prices to weekly lows, while the S&P 500 index snapped a four-session losing streak and ended the day with gains.
Panic shorting is the most common trading activity that stirs the market after a data release fails to match expectations. This happens when traders sell an asset in large numbers during the few minutes following a disappointing release. This leads beginners to believe that selling the asset is the right thing to do, intensifying the sell-off, while seasoned traders view this as an opportunity to go long.
Did you know?
Economic calendars also mark the events as high, medium, or low impact to help traders identify which ones to pay the most attention to while making trading decisions.
Trading strategies based on the three timeframes of an economic release are called calendar trading techniques. Here are a few:
Certain asset classes experience higher trading activity right before important data releases. Traders identify such instruments and use them to enhance their trading. Traders use values from the previous release, the trend the values indicate, and the forecast data from the economic calendar to open positions before the economic events.
This is a little tricky. The goal is to take positions based on analyst reports about an upcoming data release such that they get triggered if the data released is in-line with the prediction. For instance, traders who predict the asset valuation to increase in response to a data release buy the asset in advance and sell it when the news is out. They often create pending orders to make the most of the opportunity. Setting stop loss and take profit limits becomes critical to manage risk in the case of an unfavourable data release.
Often conservative traders or beginners skip trading around economic data releases and wait for the markets to respond to the news before opening positions. Two popular ways to do this are:
Disclaimer:
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