Macro event library

Macro event guides for active traders

This section covers the recurring macro events that reprice risk across crypto, stocks, forex, and commodities, so you can translate scheduled headlines into usable market context quickly.

Coverage
Fed, CPI, jobs, yields, dollar, earnings
Use case
Convert macro headlines into trader-grade decision context
Why it helps
Gives you a repeatable framework for scheduled market-moving catalysts
Fed Rate Decision

Fed Rate Decision Outlook

Fed decisions move markets by repricing liquidity, risk appetite, and the cost of capital. Traders should watch the rate decision, statement language, dot-plot guidance, and Powell’s tone together.

Best for: what happens to markets when the Fed changes rates
US CPI Report

CPI Report Market Guide

CPI matters because inflation surprises directly change rate expectations. Hot prints can pressure risk assets through yields and the dollar, while cooler prints can support duration and growth-sensitive trades.

Best for: how CPI affects stocks crypto and forex
US Jobs Report

Jobs Report (NFP) Trading Guide

NFP can move markets fast because it changes the growth and inflation narrative at the same time. Payrolls, unemployment, and wage growth need to be read together before treating the move as durable.

Best for: how non-farm payrolls affect the market
Earnings Season

Earnings Season Market Playbook

Earnings season matters less for isolated beats and more for guidance, margins, and sector leadership. Traders should focus on revisions breadth and whether market leaders are validating the tape.

Best for: how earnings season impacts stocks and the broader market
Treasury Yields

Treasury Yield Move Explainer

Treasury yields matter because they reset discount rates and macro opportunity cost. Rising real yields often pressure speculative and duration-heavy assets, while falling yields can support growth and risk-taking.

Best for: why rising Treasury yields hurt growth stocks
US Dollar Strength

US Dollar Strength And Risk Assets

A stronger US dollar can tighten global financial conditions and pressure risk assets, while a weaker dollar often supports liquidity-sensitive trades and commodity pricing.

Best for: how a strong dollar affects stocks crypto and commodities