Track high and medium impact macro events in Europe/Athens time so you can plan risk, avoid surprises, and execute with more confidence.
Primary view: Economic calendar daily view (Europe/Athens, high + medium impact)
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
ECB President Lagarde speaks. Markets listen for signals about Eurozone monetary policy.
Factory activity index. Above 50 = factories are expanding, below 50 = shrinking.
US factory activity index. Above 50 = expansion, below 50 = contraction.
What US factories are paying for materials. Rising prices can signal future inflation.
The US President speaks. Markets react to policy announcements on trade, taxes, or spending.
A Reserve Bank of Australia official speaks. May signal future interest rate direction.
An ECB board member shares views on monetary policy or the economy.
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
Inflation excluding food and energy. The number central banks watch most closely.
Early estimate of Eurozone inflation. Impacts ECB rate expectations.
Government spending vs. revenue. A deficit means the government spends more than it earns.
Gross Domestic Product — the total value of everything a country produces. The broadest measure of economic growth.
Consumer Price Index — measures how fast prices are rising. High CPI = high inflation.
The most important US jobs report. Shows how many new jobs were created. Big market mover.
US services sector activity. Services make up about 70% of the US economy.
A Bank of Canada official speaks. May affect CAD pairs.
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
Producer Price Index — what manufacturers pay for goods. A leading indicator for consumer inflation.
How much factories, mines, and utilities are producing. A key measure of economic output.
The percentage of people looking for work but unable to find it. Key indicator of economic health.
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
How much consumers are spending in shops. Consumer spending drives most of the economy.
How much consumers are spending in shops. Consumer spending drives most of the economy.
Consumer Price Index — measures how fast prices are rising. High CPI = high inflation.
How much consumers are spending in shops. Consumer spending drives most of the economy.
How much consumers are spending in shops. Consumer spending drives most of the economy.
Survey of how optimistic people feel about the economy. Confident consumers spend more.
The percentage of people looking for work but unable to find it. Key indicator of economic health.
Minutes from the last ECB meeting. Reveals how policymakers voted and what they discussed.
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
The cost of labor per unit of output. Rising costs may push inflation higher.
Cost of imported goods. Rising import prices can push consumer prices higher.
ECB President Lagarde speaks. Markets listen for signals about Eurozone monetary policy.
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
Weekly count of people filing for unemployment benefits. Rising claims = weaker economy.
ECB President Lagarde speaks. Markets listen for signals about Eurozone monetary policy.
An economic data release or official event that may affect the markets.
The most important US jobs report. Shows how many new jobs were created. Big market mover.
How much workers' pay is growing. Rising wages can lead to higher inflation.
Retail sales excluding cars. Shows consumer spending trends without auto volatility.
How much consumers are spending in shops. Consumer spending drives most of the economy.
The percentage of people looking for work but unable to find it. Key indicator of economic health.
Canadian purchasing managers' index. Measures overall business activity in Canada.
These events often cause big, fast price moves. Be careful with open trades.
Moderate price movement possible. Worth paying attention to.
Usually minor effect on prices. Good to know but rarely a concern.
An economic calendar shows when key macro releases and central bank events are scheduled. If you trade forex, indices, commodities, crypto, or stocks, these events can change volatility and direction very quickly. A structured calendar routine helps you prepare in advance instead of reacting emotionally after the move has already started.
The core idea is simple: markets react to surprises versus expectations. So the calendar is not just a list of times; it is a map of potential expectation gaps. When you know when these gaps are likely to appear, you can protect risk, avoid low-quality entries, and focus on better opportunities.
Not every release deserves equal attention. A high and medium impact filter removes noise and keeps your focus on events that are more likely to affect real trading decisions. This creates clarity, especially for intraday and swing traders who need a practical event shortlist every day.
Timezone confusion causes avoidable mistakes. Keeping one consistent timezone in your workflow avoids missed releases and bad timing around daylight-saving changes. Europe/Athens is a practical reference for many traders active in European and US overlap sessions.
Before trading: open the calendar, confirm timezone, and mark high-priority events. During trading: reduce risk before major releases, avoid impulsive entries around the exact release minute, and wait for structure if volatility is chaotic. After trading: review outcomes and update your playbook notes.
Major releases can widen spreads and increase slippage. Adjusting risk before the event window is often more important than trying to be first into the move. Good process includes smaller size, controlled exposure across correlated instruments, and clear invalidation rules.
Technical levels show where price may react. The economic calendar shows when reaction probability rises. Combining both helps you avoid false confidence in clean chart setups just before a major macro release.
Track event type, forecast versus actual surprise, first reaction, follow-through quality, and your own execution quality. Over time, this creates a personalized event playbook that improves consistency and decision quality.
The economic calendar is not a signal generator. It is a context and risk framework. Used consistently, it helps you trade with more structure, fewer surprises, and better discipline.