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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. As the new month begins

  • traders are getting ready to book year end profits. Traders will be aggressively looking

  • for action pushing volumes higher than usual before things slow down for the holiday season.

  • With most central bank meetings behind and the next meeting not scheduled until December

  • which will make economic data key to trading. A busy week lies ahead of us, both in economic

  • and corporate terms. PMIs from around the world, covering both

  • manufacturing and services, will provide plenty of fuel for those assessing whether various

  • parts of the global economy are going forward or backwards. While it is probably too early

  • to see the impact of the recent Chinese rate cut in the China PMIs this week, but any signs

  • of improvement here will allay concerns. The Federal Reserve kept rates unchanged, but

  • the tweaks to the statement suggest that December is now fractionally morelivewhere

  • possible rate increases are concerned than it was a week ago. However, data needs to

  • pick up considerably before the market really begins to think more seriously about a move

  • at the final meeting of the year. The week kicks off on Sunday in China when

  • the National Bureau of Statistics releases the purchasing manager indexes for both manufacturing

  • and the services sectors. The data is effectively ancient history following stimulus measures

  • employed by the central bank. On Monday, the private sector variant of China’s

  • manufacturing purchasing manager’s index from Caixin will be issued. And on Wednesday

  • Caixin will issue its services purchasing managers index.

  • Eurozone manufacturing PMI will be release for individual countries as well as the overall

  • Eurozone. Also the UK numbers will be release. In the US, the week begins on Monday with

  • the release of the ISM manufacturing index. Economists expect that the index eased from

  • 50.2 to 49.7. Interesting the final reading of the competing Markit purchasing managers

  • index for October is also issued and the preliminary reading was a lot higher than the ISM index

  • at 54.0. On Tuesday the Reserve Bank meets to decide

  • interest rate settings. And for the first time in six months, a decision to cut rates

  • is being seriously entertained. Wednesday will see the ADP private jobs data

  • from the US a leading indicator for the Nonfarm payroll report. The release of the monthly

  • US jobs report on Friday will be very closely watched; given it will be the second to last

  • report before the Federal Reserve´s next policy meeting in December. 152K jobs are

  • forecast to have been created, up from 142K last month, and while the unemployment rate

  • is expected to tick up to 5.2% from 5.1%. Average hourly earnings are forecast to rise

  • by 0.2% from 0% MoM. Second in importance will be Thursday´s Bank

  • of England monetary policy committee decision on rates, accompanied by the latest meeting

  • minutes and Inflation Report. Scattered throughout the week are the standard

  • new month data releases including Eurozone retail sales, Australian employment numbers

  • as well as Canadian jobs data.

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

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