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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 during the week. This

  • week traders are hoping for a bit less stress after last week’s unexpected excitement.

  • Concerns about China ratcheted higher last week after the country shocked the world by

  • devaluing its currency. That raised the specter of a global trade war or that Beijing was

  • panicking over a more severe economic slowdown than expected. Chinese officials already spooked

  • global investors with their heavy-handed response to the crash in stock prices earlier this

  • summer. The biggest reason why China matters is size.

  • Unlike Greece, Puerto Rico or other one-off situations, China has the scale to impact

  • the entire globe. It's now the world's second-largest economy,

  • blowing past Japan and Germany in recent years. China is also the biggest consumer of raw

  • materials like oil and copper, both of which have plunged in recent weeks. A more dramatic

  • decline in Chinese growth could cause commodities to crumble further, unleashing financial havoc

  • on countries that rely on those natural resources. By the end of the week and after a rare public

  • announcement from the PBOC reversed market stress.

  • Over the weekend surveys from the Wall Street Journal and Reuters both pointed to two interest

  • rate increases by the Fed which should dominate trading this week. Gold should reverse gains

  • while the US dollar surges. A number of Fed policy makers have signaled the first rate

  • increase may come at their Sept. 16-17 meeting. “It will take a significant deterioration

  • in the economic picture for me to be disinclined to move ahead,” Federal Reserve Bank of

  • Atlanta President Dennis Lockhart told the Journal last week.

  • The week kicks off on Monday with the release of the New York Federal Reserve manufacturing

  • index, the housing market activity index from the National Association of Home Builders

  • and data on capital flows. On Tuesday, data on housing starts and building

  • permits will be released together with the usual weekly chain store sales figures. The

  • building permits data is the leading gauge on home building. Economists expect that permits

  • fell by 10 per cent in July. But housing starts may have remained stable at a 1.17 million

  • annual rate in the month. On Wednesday, the July consumer price index

  • (inflation) is issued. Federal Reserve policymakers would prefer to see some evidence that inflationary

  • pressures are picking up before they decide to lift interest rates. The big event of the

  • week will be the FOMC minutes release in the afternoon US time.

  • On Thursday the leading index is released together with data on existing home sales,

  • the pivotal Philadelphia Federal Reserve business survey and the regular weekly data on claims

  • for unemployment insurance.

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

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