Fundamentals & Macro
Fundamentals is the why behind the move: rates, inflation, growth, earnings, liquidity, and cycles. This page gives you a complete workflow: where to find data, how to read it, how to think in scenarios, and how to combine it with technical levels for real trades.
- Explains direction + regime (risk-on/off)
- Predicts volatility windows (events)
- Helps you avoid trading random noise
- Adds conviction only when conditions align
- It doesnt give exact entries
- It doesnt remove risk
- It doesnt guarantee direction on release
- It must be paired with execution rules
- Calendar -' scenarios -' levels -' risk
- Trade post-event structure (not spikes)
- Review expectations vs outcome
- Build a repeatable macro playbook
1) Core macro drivers (the engine behind price)
Markets are forward-looking. Price usually moves because expectations about the future change. Your job is to understand what the market cares about right now (the active narrative), and how that affects each asset class.
- Interest rates influence currency strength and discount rates in stocks.
- Markets move on expectations: the change in the path matters more than the current level.
- Watch: policy rate decisions, press conferences, meeting minutes, and forward guidance.
- Inflation changes how central banks behave (tighten vs ease).
- Sticky inflation can keep rates higher for longer; disinflation can push easing.
- Watch: CPI, PCE (US), core vs headline, wage growth, inflation expectations.
- Strong growth can support risk assets but may also mean higher rates.
- Weak growth can trigger easing (bullish for some assets) but also recession risk (bearish).
- Watch: GDP, NFP/jobs, unemployment, PMIs/ISM, retail sales.
- Liquidity drives risk appetite. Tight credit can break rallies.
- Watch: credit spreads, funding stress, bank conditions, major liquidity injections/withdrawals.
- In crypto, liquidity + leverage positioning can dominate fundamentals short-term.
- Earnings are the engine: revenue growth, margins, guidance, and estimates revisions.
- Stocks often move more on guidance and expectations than on the headline beat/miss.
- Watch: earnings dates, guidance, margins, free cash flow, and sector rotation.
- Markets flip between seeking risk (equities/crypto) and seeking safety (cash, some bonds, USD).
- Correlation regimes change. Your strategy must respect that.
- Watch: volatility indices, USD strength, rates expectations, equity breadth.
2) Forex vs Stocks vs Crypto (same macro, different behavior)
- Currencies trade in pairs: its always relative (USD vs EUR, etc.)
- Main driver: interest-rate expectations between two economies
- Big data: inflation, jobs, PMIs, central bank guidance
- News sensitivity is high; spreads can widen during releases
- Longer horizon: earnings and growth matter a lot
- Rates affect valuations (discount rate)
- Central bank shifts can change sector leadership
- Company earnings can override macro short-term
- Trades 24/7, reacts to global liquidity and risk sentiment
- Liquidity and leverage positioning can dominate
- Narratives matter: ETF flows, regulation, tech upgrades, ecosystem cycles
- Macro shocks can create violent moves (thin liquidity at times)
- Scalping/day trading: fundamentals = volatility schedule + regime.
- Swing trading: fundamentals = bias + catalyst + positioning.
- Investing: fundamentals = earnings/cashflow + cycles + valuation.
3) Economic calendar (how to read it without getting trapped)
The calendar is your volatility map. Professionals do not get surprised by CPI or central bank decisions. They plan around it.
- Previous: last reading
- Forecast: consensus expectation
- Actual: released data
- Revision: updates to older data (often ignored by beginners)
- High-impact: rates, inflation, jobs
- Medium: PMIs, retail sales, confidence
- Low: many minor prints (still can move in thin markets)
- Use one consistent time zone for your week plan
- Convert release time to your local time
- Avoid trading 1-5 minutes before major releases
- First move can be a trap (liquidity sweep / stop hunt).
- Second move (post-digest) often shows the real direction.
- Sometimes price moves opposite the headline because expectations/positioning dominate.
- Spreads widen; stops can slip; fills can be worse than expected.
4) Major events (what moves markets hard)
| Event | Why it moves price | What to watch | Risk rule |
|---|---|---|---|
| Central bank decision | Resets rate expectations and volatility. Big impact in FX and equities. | Statement, dot plot/path, press conference tone, Q&A surprises. | Avoid first spike; trade the post-event structure with smaller risk. |
| Inflation (CPI/PCE) | Moves rates expectations quickly. Big for FX, indices, gold, crypto. | Core vs headline, services vs goods, revisions, expectations vs actual. | Spreads widen; stops can slip. Reduce size or wait 5-15 minutes. |
| Jobs (NFP, unemployment) | Affects growth and inflation narrative; huge for USD pairs. | Unemployment rate, wage growth, revisions, participation rate. | If you trade it, predefine max loss; dont average down during spikes. |
| PMI / ISM | Fast read on growth momentum; can shift sector leadership. | New orders, prices paid, employment components. | Often creates a second move after initial headline-wait for confirmation. |
| Earnings (single stock) | Gap risk; options implied volatility matters. | Guidance, margins, revenue quality, outlook vs estimates. | Dont hold leveraged positions through earnings unless its your plan. |
| Major geopolitical shock | Risk-off spikes and correlation breaks happen fast. | Energy price reaction, safe-haven flows, liquidity conditions. | Reduce exposure; widen stops only if size is smaller; dont chase headlines. |
- Mark key levels before the event
- Wait for post-event direction + retest
- Use smaller size and defined stop
- Journal what changed in expectations
5) Where to find reliable fundamentals (websites & official sources)
Use calendars for timing and awareness. For major reports, confirm details using official sources or high-quality terminals/news providers when possible. The goal is accuracy and consistency.
6) How to use fundamentals in real trades (complete workflow)
Fundamentals is not predict the number. Its: understand the regime, plan scenarios, and use technical levels to execute with controlled risk.
| Step | What to do | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 1) Know your asset & driver | Forex: rates expectations, growth, inflation. Stocks: earnings + rates. Crypto: liquidity + risk appetite + narratives. | You stop mixing frameworks. |
| 2) Map the week (calendar first) | List the high-impact events for your pairs/indices/coins. | You avoid surprise volatility. |
| 3) Build a bias (conditional) | If data is hotter than expected -' rates path may rise -' currency strengthens, risk may wobble (context dependent). | You trade scenarios, not feelings. |
| 4) Combine with technicals | Use fundamentals to pick direction + environment, then use technicals to time entries at levels with defined risk. | Cleaner execution and fewer random trades. |
| 5) Manage event risk | Decide: avoid, reduce size, or wait for the second move after the release. | Your account survives news. |
| 6) Review like a pro | After the event, write what you expected vs what happened and why price moved (expectations, positioning, liquidity). | You actually learn. |
- If inflation is hotter than expected -' rates path may rise
- If growth is weakening fast -' easing expectations may increase
- If liquidity is tightening -' risk assets may struggle
- Use fundamentals to pick environment + direction bias
- Use technicals to pick entry/stop at clear invalidation
- Use structure to avoid chasing
- Reduce size on high-impact events
- Expect slippage; place stops where your idea is invalid
- Avoid moving stop because news
7) Common mistakes (what beginners do wrong)
- Trading the release spike with big size
- Ignoring spreads/slippage on volatile events
- Taking trades without knowing what event is happening
- Good news = buy thinking without expectations context
- Holding leveraged positions into earnings/news randomly
- Plan the week around the calendar
- Mark levels before events; wait for structure after
- Trade the environment (risk-on/off, rate path)
- Keep a macro journal: narrative + changes
- Size down when uncertainty is high
8) Pre-trade macro checklist (copy/paste mindset)
- What asset is this (FX/stocks/crypto) and what is its main driver right now?
- What big events are coming in the next 24-72 hours?
- What is the market expecting (consensus)?
- What would invalidate my bias (scenario that flips the view)?
- Where is my technical invalidation (stop) and is my size correct?
- If volatility spikes, do I reduce size or step aside?
- Am I trading a plan or reacting to a headline?
Fundamentals is not a signal service. It is a framework to understand context and avoid trading blind. Your edge comes from combining context + execution + risk control.
FAQ
Why did the market move opposite to the news headline?
Should I avoid trading during big news?
What is the single most important macro driver for FX?
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