What You Will Learn in This Guide
1. What fundamental analysis is and how it differs from technical analysis.
2. Why currency values rise and fall and the three forces that drive them.
3. How to read and use the Forex Factory economic calendar before every trading session.
4. A complete breakdown of every high-impact event: NFP, CPI, FOMC, GDP, PMI, Retail Sales, and more.
5. A complete instrument direction reference table showing how 20+ instruments typically react to each major event.
6. How to read an actual news release in real time and understand what the numbers mean.
7. Three practical frameworks for using fundamental data in your own trading.
8. How fundamental analysis applies differently to Forex, Crypto, and Synthetic Indices.
9. A complete daily pre-session routine for incorporating the economic calendar into your trading.
Introduction
Picture this. You have spent two hours analysing EUR/USD on the 4-hour chart. The structure is clean. Price has pulled back perfectly to a key support level. Your setup is there. Every item on your checklist is ticked. You enter the trade with a well-placed stop loss and a clear target.
Then, 20 minutes later, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the Non-Farm Payrolls report. The actual figure comes in far stronger than the market expected. In 60 seconds, EUR/USD drops 120 pips. Your stop loss is triggered. The trade that looked perfect on the chart is gone before the London session even warms up.
This is not a rare scenario. It happens to beginner traders every single month on NFP Friday, every time the Federal Reserve makes a rate decision, and every time a major inflation reading surprises the market. And it keeps happening to the same traders for the same reason: they are trading the chart without understanding the forces that actually move prices.
Fundamental analysis is the study of those forces. It is the discipline of understanding why currencies move, not just where they have moved. It tells you the economic context that gives meaning to every candlestick on your chart. It explains why a technically perfect setup fails against a wall of economic reality, and why the best technical traders in the world check the economic calendar before they check their charts.
This guide is written for beginners. It assumes no prior knowledge of economics. Every concept is explained from the ground up, in plain language, with practical examples drawn from real market events. By the end of this guide, you will understand what every major economic event means, how to read it when it releases, how to find the likely direction for any instrument you trade, and how to use that understanding to make better trading decisions.
Technical analysis tells you where price might go. Fundamental analysis tells you why it is going there. The traders who combine both are operating with a complete picture. The traders who use only one are working with half a map.
Section 1: What Is Fundamental Analysis?
Fundamental analysis in Forex is the study of economic, political, and social factors that affect the supply and demand for a currency. It is the answer to a simple question: why does one currency become more or less valuable relative to another?
When a country’s economy is growing strongly, when its central bank is raising interest rates, and when investors around the world have confidence in its financial system, demand for that country’s currency increases. When the opposite is true, demand falls. Fundamental analysis is the process of tracking and interpreting the data that tells us which direction an economy is moving.
Fundamental Analysis vs Technical Analysis: What Is the Difference?
Technical analysis looks at historical price action on a chart to predict future price movement. It uses tools like support and resistance levels, moving averages, candlestick patterns, and momentum indicators. Technical analysis is entirely backward-looking: it works from the assumption that historical price behaviour tends to repeat.
Fundamental analysis looks at the underlying economic forces that drive price. It uses data like interest rates, inflation figures, employment numbers, and GDP growth. Fundamental analysis is forward-looking: it attempts to understand where an economy is heading, because currency prices follow economic reality over time.
The most effective traders use both. Technical analysis tells them where to enter a trade, with precision and defined risk. Fundamental analysis tells them which direction to look for that entry, by understanding the larger economic current that price is moving within.
A Simple Way to Think About It
Think of fundamental analysis as the wind and technical analysis as the sail.
The wind (fundamental forces) determines the overall direction the boat will travel. The sail (technical analysis) determines exactly when and how you catch that wind to move efficiently.
Trying to sail against a powerful wind is possible for short distances but exhausting and risky over time. Trading against the fundamental current works similarly.
Do Beginner Traders Need to Learn Fundamental Analysis?
Yes. Not because you need to become an economist, but because you need to understand two essential things. First, when high-impact economic events are scheduled so you can protect your trades from unexpected volatility. Second, what the overall economic backdrop looks like for the currencies you trade so you can trade with the current rather than against it.
Even if you never use fundamental analysis to enter a trade directly, knowing when NFP releases, when the Federal Reserve meets, and when CPI data is published is critical risk management information. Traders who ignore the economic calendar get caught out by events that were publicly scheduled weeks in advance.
Section 2: What Actually Drives Currency Values?
Before we get into specific economic events, you need to understand the four core forces that determine why one currency rises or falls relative to another. Everything in fundamental analysis connects back to one or more of these forces.
Force 1: Interest Rates
Interest rates are the single most powerful driver of currency values in Forex. When a country’s central bank raises interest rates, investors and institutions can earn a higher return by depositing money in that country. Higher returns attract more foreign capital. More foreign capital means more demand for that currency. More demand means the price of the currency goes up.
The reverse is equally true. When a central bank cuts interest rates, returns on deposits fall. Foreign capital moves elsewhere seeking better returns. Demand for the currency decreases. The price falls.
This is why every central bank decision is a major market event. The Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, and every other major central bank sets the interest rate that determines global demand for their currency.
Force 2: Inflation
Inflation is the rate at which prices for goods and services are rising in an economy. Central banks have a mandate to keep inflation within a target range, typically around 2 percent per year for most developed economies. Inflation matters to Forex traders for one specific reason: central banks raise interest rates to control high inflation and cut interest rates to stimulate economies with low inflation.
When inflation data comes in higher than expected, it signals that the central bank may need to raise interest rates. Higher rate expectations strengthen the currency. When inflation comes in lower than expected, it signals that the central bank may cut rates. Lower rate expectations weaken the currency.
Force 3: Economic Growth and Employment
A growing economy generates jobs, increases consumer spending, and generally attracts foreign investment. All of these increase demand for the local currency. When an economy is contracting, the opposite happens. GDP growth, employment figures, and consumer spending data all feed into the market’s view of whether an economy is strengthening or weakening.
Force 4: Risk Sentiment
During periods of uncertainty, geopolitical tension, or financial stress, investors move money out of riskier assets and into safe havens. The Japanese Yen (JPY), Swiss Franc (CHF), and US Dollar (USD) are traditionally considered safe haven currencies. During risk-on periods, higher-yielding and commodity currencies like AUD and NZD tend to strengthen alongside equities and crypto.
Section 3: The Economic Calendar
The economic calendar is a schedule of all upcoming economic data releases, central bank announcements, and political events that are likely to affect financial markets. The most widely used free calendar for Forex traders is Forex Factory.
See: 15 Essential Platforms Every Forex Trader Needs
How to Read the Forex Factory Calendar
| Column | What It Means | Example |
| Currency | The country whose economy the event relates to | USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, AUD… |
| Impact | How much the event typically moves the market | Red = High, Orange = Medium, Yellow = Low |
| Event Name | The specific economic report or announcement | Non-Farm Payrolls, CPI, FOMC Rate Decision |
| Previous | The figure from the last time this event was released | Gives context for the new reading |
| Forecast | The market consensus estimate for this release | The number markets have already priced in |
| Actual | The real figure released, shown in real time | Beats forecast = bullish. Misses = bearish |
The Colour-Coded Impact System
- Red (High Impact): These are the events that move markets. Always check for red events before opening or holding a position. Spreads widen dramatically and slippage is common.
- Orange (Medium Impact): Can cause meaningful movement but generally less volatile than red events. Worth noting but not always requiring action.
- Yellow (Low Impact): Minor data releases that rarely cause significant movement. Generally safe to trade around.
The Single Most Important Calendar Habit
Every morning before you open your trading platform, spend two minutes on Forex Factory. Filter the calendar to show red events only. Check what red events are scheduled during your trading session and which currencies they affect.
This two-minute habit will save you from being caught out by events that were publicly scheduled weeks in advance.
Understanding the Forecast vs Actual Dynamic
By the time an economic figure is actually released, the market has already been pricing in the expected result for days or weeks. What actually moves the market when the data releases is the difference between the actual figure and the forecast. Not the actual figure alone. The difference.
If the forecast for US CPI is 3.2 percent and the actual reading comes in at 3.2 percent, there is often almost no reaction at all. The market already priced in 3.2 percent. There is no surprise. If the actual reading comes in at 3.7 percent, that 0.5 percentage point surprise triggers a repricing of interest rate expectations and the USD strengthens immediately.
The market does not react to what the number is. It reacts to how different the number is from what everyone expected. A bad number that is less bad than forecast can rally a currency. A good number that falls short of forecast can sink one.
Section 4: Every High-Impact Event Explained
Here is a comprehensive breakdown of every major high-impact event on the Forex economic calendar.
4.1 Central Bank Interest Rate Decisions
Central bank meetings are the most market-moving events on the entire economic calendar. Here are the major central banks and their key information:
| Central Bank | Currency | Committee | Meetings | Key Notes |
| US Federal Reserve (Fed) | USD | FOMC | 8 times per year | Global markets most sensitive to Fed decisions |
| European Central Bank (ECB) | EUR | Governing Council | 8 times per year | Controls rates for 20 Euro area countries |
| Bank of England (BoE) | GBP | MPC | 8 times per year | Strong market mover for GBP pairs |
| Bank of Japan (BoJ) | JPY | Policy Board | 8 times per year | Known for surprise policy shifts and interventions |
| Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) | AUD | Board | 11 times per year | Key driver for AUD/USD and commodity currencies |
| Bank of Canada (BoC) | CAD | Governing Council | 8 times per year | Oil prices also heavily influence CAD |
| Swiss National Bank (SNB) | CHF | Quarterly | 4 times per year | CHF is a safe haven currency, SNB intervenes actively |
The Hawkish and Dovish Framework
Hawkish vs Dovish: Plain Language Explanation
Hawkish: A central bank focused on controlling inflation, open to raising interest rates. Hawkish commentary typically strengthens the currency.
Dovish: A central bank focused on supporting growth, open to cutting interest rates. Dovish commentary typically weakens the currency.
These positions exist on a spectrum. A central bank can shift from hawkish to neutral to dovish over time and the currency will follow.
The Three Components of Every Rate Decision
- The Rate Decision: Raise, cut, or hold. A surprise raise strengthens. A surprise cut weakens. An expected decision often causes minimal reaction since it was already priced in.
- The Policy Statement: The written statement contains language about future direction. Hawkish language strengthens the currency. Dovish language weakens it.
- The Press Conference: Often more market-moving than the decision itself. The governor’s tone and responses to analyst questions generate immediate market reactions.
4.2 Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP)
USD Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP)
Release: First Friday of every month at 8:30 AM EST (3:30 PM EAT / 2:30 PM CAT) | Impact: Extreme — often 80 to 150 pip moves in EUR/USD within the first minute | Key Pairs: All USD pairs (EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY, USD/CHF, AUD/USD, USD/CAD)
NFP measures the net number of jobs added or lost across the US economy in the previous month, excluding farm workers. The Federal Reserve has a dual mandate of price stability and maximum employment. NFP is the primary measure of the employment side of that mandate. When job creation is strong, the Fed has more confidence to raise or maintain higher interest rates.
- What beats the forecast means: USD typically strengthens immediately as rate hike expectations increase.
- What misses the forecast means: USD typically weakens as rate cut expectations increase.
- The wages component: Average Hourly Earnings is often more important than the headline job number. Strong wage growth signals inflationary pressure which strengthens rate hike expectations further.
- The prior month revision: A significant upward revision can be as bullish for USD as a beat on the current month.
- Why to avoid trading the initial spike: The initial 60-second reaction is one of the most dangerous moments in Forex. Spreads widen dramatically and the initial direction frequently reverses. Wait at least 20 minutes.
Here is how to interpret different NFP outcomes:
| NFP Outcome | Typical USD Reaction | Why It Happens |
| Actual beats forecast by large margin | USD strengthens sharply | Rate hike expectations increase |
| Actual beats forecast slightly | USD strengthens moderately | Market watches next release for confirmation |
| Actual matches forecast exactly | Minimal reaction | Market had already priced this in |
| Actual misses forecast slightly | USD weakens moderately | Rate cut expectations nudge higher |
| Actual misses forecast by large margin | USD weakens sharply | Rate cut expectations increase significantly |
| Headline beats but wages miss | Mixed reaction, often reversal | Wages are the inflation indicator, market focuses on them |
4.3 Consumer Price Index (CPI)
Multiple currencies Consumer Price Index (CPI)
Release: Monthly — US CPI releases around the 10th to 14th of each month at 8:30 AM EST | Impact: Very High — major market mover for the relevant currency | Key Pairs: All USD pairs (US CPI), all EUR pairs (Euro area CPI), all GBP pairs (UK CPI)
CPI measures the change in prices of a standard basket of goods and services. It is the primary measure of inflation. Central banks set their interest rate policy primarily in response to CPI readings. When CPI is significantly above the 2 percent target, the central bank needs to raise rates to cool down price growth.
- Core CPI vs headline CPI: Core CPI excludes food and energy prices because these are volatile. Central banks typically pay more attention to Core CPI.
- When CPI beats forecast: Higher than expected CPI suggests the central bank needs to raise rates further. The currency typically strengthens.
- When CPI misses forecast: Lower than expected CPI reduces pressure on the central bank to keep rates high. The currency typically weakens as rate cut expectations increase.
4.4 Federal Reserve FOMC Meetings
USD FOMC Meeting and Rate Decision
Release: 8 times per year. Full schedule at federalreserve.gov | Impact: Extreme — can move USD pairs by 100 to 300 pips across the meeting, statement, and press conference | Key Pairs: All USD pairs
The FOMC sets the federal funds rate, the most influential single interest rate in global financial markets. Because the USD is the world’s reserve currency, FOMC decisions affect not just USD pairs but also risk sentiment across global markets including equities, commodities, and crypto.
- The dot plot: Every other meeting publishes interest rate projections. When dot plot projections shift more hawkish (higher expected rates) USD strengthens. Dovish shifts weaken USD.
- Forward guidance: Markets are most interested in what the Fed signals about future decisions. Language like ‘data dependent’ or ‘prepared to act’ are signals professional traders interpret carefully.
- The press conference: The 45-minute press conference is often the biggest price mover. EUR/USD can move 50 to 100 pips within a single answer from the Fed Chair.
4.5 Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
Multiple currencies Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
Release: Quarterly — released in three stages: Flash, Preliminary, and Final | Impact: High for Flash release. Moderate for Preliminary and Final | Key Pairs: Depends on which country is releasing
GDP measures the total value of all goods and services produced within a country in a specific period. It is the broadest measure of economic health. A growing GDP signals a healthy economy that can support higher interest rates and stronger currency demand.
- The three releases: The Flash or Advance GDP release generates the most market movement because it is the freshest information. Later revisions produce less reaction because the broad picture is already known.
- Recession definition: Two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth is the technical definition of a recession. When this pattern appears, it can cause sustained currency weakness over weeks.
4.6 Purchasing Managers Index (PMI)
Multiple currencies Purchasing Managers Index (PMI)
Release: Monthly — Flash reading typically last few trading days of the month | Impact: High for Flash PMI readings | Key Pairs: Depends on which country is releasing
PMI is a survey measuring activity levels in manufacturing and services sectors. It uses a scale of 0 to 100 with 50 as the critical dividing line. Above 50 means expansion. Below 50 means contraction.
- The 50 level: PMI above 50 is generally positive for the currency. PMI below 50 is generally negative. This makes PMI one of the easiest indicators to interpret at a glance.
- PMI as a leading indicator: Because PMI is a survey published before the end of the month, it gives an early indication of economic conditions before harder data like GDP is available.
4.7 Retail Sales
Multiple currencies Retail Sales
Release: Monthly — US Retail Sales typically released around the 15th to 17th at 8:30 AM EST | Impact: High | Key Pairs: USD pairs (US), EUR pairs (Euro area), GBP pairs (UK)
Retail Sales measures the month-over-month change in total retail store sales. Because consumer spending drives approximately 70 percent of GDP in most developed economies, retail sales is one of the most direct indicators of economic health and consumer confidence.
- Core Retail Sales: Excludes automobile sales because these are large infrequent purchases that distort the data. Core is considered more representative of underlying spending trends.
- What beats the forecast means: Higher than expected retail sales signals consumer confidence and economic strength. Supports higher rate expectations and typically strengthens the currency.
4.8 Employment, Trade Balance, PPI and Other Events
Beyond the major events above, several other releases affect currency markets regularly. The unemployment rate and jobless claims data track labour market health alongside NFP. The Trade Balance measures export minus import values and directly affects commodity currencies like AUD and CAD. The Producer Price Index (PPI) measures prices at the producer level and acts as a leading indicator of future CPI readings. All of these appear on the Forex Factory calendar and are worth noting when scheduled as red events.
Section 4B: Instrument Direction Reference
How 20+ Markets Typically React to High-Impact Events
One of the most practical questions any trader asks when a major news event releases is: which direction will my instrument move? The table below provides a reference guide for 20 commonly traded instruments across Forex pairs, commodities, stock indices, and cryptocurrency.
The directions shown represent the typical tendency when US-centric events (NFP, CPI, FOMC, GDP, PMI, Retail Sales) release stronger than forecast. A stronger-than-forecast reading for any of these events generally strengthens the USD. The Risk Sentiment column shows the typical direction during a risk-on environment where investor confidence is high and markets are rising broadly.
Instrument Direction Reference Table (May 2026)
| Instrument | NFP (USD Jobs) | CPI (Inflation) | FOMC Decision | GDP Data | PMI Data | Retail Sales | Risk Sentiment |
| FOREX — Pairs Where USD Is the Quote Currency (xxx/USD) | |||||||
| XAUUSDGold vs USD | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | MIXED |
| EURUSDEuro vs USD | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | UP |
| GBPUSDBritish Pound vs USD | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | UP |
| AUDUSDAustralian Dollar vs USD | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | UP |
| NZDUSDNew Zealand Dollar vs USD | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | UP |
| XAGUSDSilver vs USD | DOWN | MIXED | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | MIXED |
| FOREX — Pairs Where USD Is the Base Currency (USD/xxx) | |||||||
| USDJPYUSD vs Japanese Yen | UP | UP | UP | UP | UP | UP | DOWN |
| USDCHFUSD vs Swiss Franc | UP | UP | UP | UP | UP | UP | DOWN |
| USDCADUSD vs Canadian Dollar | UP | UP | UP | UP | UP | UP | MIXED |
| FOREX — Cross Pairs (No USD — Driven by Own Country Data) | |||||||
| EURJPYEuro vs Japanese Yen | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | DOWN |
| GBPJPYBritish Pound vs Yen | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | DOWN |
| EURGBPEuro vs British Pound | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED | MIXED |
| CRYPTOCURRENCY — Driven by USD Strength and Risk Sentiment | |||||||
| BTCUSDBitcoin vs USD | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | MIXED | MIXED | UP |
| ETHUSDEthereum vs USD | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | MIXED | MIXED | UP |
| BNBUSDBNB vs USD | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | MIXED | MIXED | UP |
| COMMODITIES — Gold, Oil, Silver | |||||||
| XAUUSDGold (Safe Haven) | DOWN | MIXED | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN | DOWN |
| USOILWTI Crude Oil (USD/bbl) | UP | MIXED | DOWN | UP | UP | UP | UP |
| UKOILBrent Crude Oil | UP | MIXED | DOWN | UP | UP | UP | UP |
| XAGUSDSilver (Industrial + Safe Haven) | DOWN | MIXED | DOWN | MIXED | UP | MIXED | MIXED |
| US STOCK INDICES — React Inversely to Rate Hike Expectations | |||||||
| US30Dow Jones Industrial Average | UP | DOWN | DOWN | UP | UP | UP | UP |
| US100 / NAS100NASDAQ 100 | UP | DOWN | DOWN | UP | UP | UP | UP |
| SPX500S&P 500 | UP | DOWN | DOWN | UP | UP | UP | UP |
How to Read This Table
Table Direction Key
UP = The instrument typically rises when this event releases stronger than forecast.
DOWN = The instrument typically falls when this event releases stronger than forecast.
MIXED = The direction depends on secondary data within the release or the current macro environment. Read the full release before drawing conclusions.
All directions shown assume a STRONGER THAN FORECAST result for USD-centric events (NFP, CPI, FOMC, GDP, PMI, Retail Sales). A WEAKER than forecast result reverses every direction shown.
Risk Sentiment column: UP = risk-on environment (equities rise, safe havens fall). DOWN = risk-off environment (safe havens rise, equities and riskier assets fall).
Critical Reminder: These Are Tendencies, Not Guarantees
Financial markets do not follow mechanical rules. The directions shown represent the typical historical tendency when each event beats or misses the forecast. Real-world reactions are influenced by the size of the surprise, the prevailing macro narrative, prior positioning, and secondary data within the same release.
A strong NFP that beats by a small margin may produce a muted reaction. An NFP that beats by 100,000 jobs while wages also surge will produce a much larger reaction. Always check the magnitude of the beat or miss alongside the direction.
Understanding the Direction Logic for Each Group
XAUUSD (Gold) — The Special Case
Gold has a complex relationship with economic data. As a non-yielding asset, gold becomes less attractive when interest rates rise because cash and bonds offer competitive returns. This is why strong NFP, hot CPI, and hawkish FOMC decisions (all of which raise rate expectations) typically push gold DOWN. However, gold is also a safe haven and an inflation hedge, which creates conflicting forces during periods of very high inflation. When CPI prints extremely hot and traders fear inflation is spiralling out of control, gold can rise despite rate hike expectations. This is why CPI shows as MIXED for gold. In 2025 and 2026, gold has been particularly sensitive to Federal Reserve language around rate cuts, with each dovish signal triggering significant gold rallies.
US Stock Indices: US30, US100, SPX500
US stock indices have a nuanced relationship with economic data. Strong economic growth (GDP beat, strong NFP) is generally positive for corporate earnings and therefore positive for equities. However, the relationship changes when inflation is high. A very hot CPI reading or a more aggressive FOMC rate decision raises borrowing costs, which reduces corporate profitability and equity valuations. This is why CPI and FOMC show as DOWN for indices even though they are bullish for USD. The rule of thumb: good economy news is good for stocks, but high inflation news is bad for stocks because of the rate hike implications.
USOIL (WTI Crude Oil)
Crude oil prices are driven by supply and demand for physical oil, not directly by US economic data. However, US economic data matters indirectly. A strong US economy (strong GDP, strong employment, strong consumer spending) implies higher energy demand, which is positive for oil prices. A strong USD from the same events creates a partial offset because oil is priced in USD globally, making it more expensive for non-USD buyers. The net result is that strong US economic data tends to be mildly positive for oil through the demand channel, though oil’s biggest movers are typically OPEC production decisions, geopolitical events in oil-producing regions, and inventory data from the US Energy Information Administration.
USDJPY and USDCHF — The Safe Havens
JPY and CHF are traditional safe haven currencies. When risk sentiment turns negative, global investors move money into these currencies regardless of their own economic conditions. This is why the Risk Sentiment column shows DOWN for USDJPY and USDCHF: in a risk-off environment, JPY and CHF both strengthen broadly, causing USDJPY and USDCHF to fall even though USD may also be strengthening. The direction of these pairs in risk events depends on which currency strengthens more: USD or the safe haven. In extreme risk-off events like financial crises or geopolitical shocks, JPY and CHF often strengthen faster than USD, pushing these pairs lower.
Cross Pairs: EURJPY, GBPJPY, EURGBP
Cross pairs do not involve USD, so US economic data affects them only indirectly through risk sentiment. When strong US data pushes risk-on sentiment (markets believe the US economy is healthy), this generally supports EURJPY and GBPJPY because JPY weakens in risk-on environments, making these pairs rise. However, EUR and GBP cross movements are primarily driven by their own economic data: ECB decisions, UK CPI, Euro area GDP, and UK employment figures matter far more for EUR/GBP than any US data point. MIXED is the appropriate rating for cross pairs in response to USD events.
Cryptocurrency: BTCUSD, ETHUSD, BNBUSD
Crypto assets have become increasingly correlated with risk sentiment and inversely correlated with USD strength since 2022. When strong US economic data pushes USD higher and raises rate expectations, the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding crypto assets increases, which typically pushes crypto prices down. During risk-on environments where investors are confident and willing to take on higher-risk investments, crypto often benefits alongside equities. During risk-off events, crypto tends to sell off alongside equities. The PMI and Retail Sales columns show MIXED for crypto because these events are less directly linked to crypto prices than the major monetary policy events.
Section 5: How to Read a News Release in Real Time
Knowing what each economic event is does not automatically translate into knowing what to do when one releases. This section walks you through the exact process of reading and responding to a high-impact news release in real time, using NFP as the example.
Before the Release: Your Preparation Routine
- Check the time of release in your local timezone: NFP releases at 8:30 AM EST. That is 3:30 PM East Africa Time and 2:30 PM Central Africa Time. Know exactly when the event hits so you are not caught by surprise.
- Note the forecast and previous figures: Open Forex Factory and find the NFP row. Note the Forecast and Previous figures. These give you the context for interpreting the actual when it releases.
- Assess your current positions: If you are holding any open trades on USD pairs, decide now whether you will close them before the release, set a wider stop, or hold as normal. This decision should be made before the event, not during it.
- Refer to the instrument direction table: Check the relevant row for your instrument above. Remind yourself which direction a beat or miss typically pushes your market before the release hits.
At the Moment of Release: Reading the Numbers
When NFP releases, you will see the Actual figure appear next to the Forecast in the Forex Factory calendar row. The first thing you do is compare Actual to Forecast. Not Actual to Previous. Actual to Forecast.
- Calculate the beat or miss: Actual minus Forecast gives you the surprise. Example: Forecast was 185,000 jobs. Actual is 256,000. Beat of 71,000 jobs. That is a significant positive surprise.
- Check the wages figure: Scroll down in the same report to see Average Hourly Earnings. If wages also beat, the USD reaction will be amplified. If wages miss despite a strong headline, the reaction may be more muted.
- Check the prior month revision: Was last month’s figure revised significantly up or down? An upward revision on top of a strong current reading amplifies the positive signal.
- Cross-reference with the direction table: Confirm the expected direction for your instrument using Section 4B above. If the data beats and your instrument is listed as DOWN on a beat, look for short setups after the dust settles.
After the Release: Waiting for the Dust to Settle
Do not try to trade the initial spike. In the first 60 seconds after NFP, price can move 80 to 150 pips in one direction, then reverse sharply, then reverse again. Spreads widen to several times their normal level. The traders who consistently profit from news events are the ones waiting 20 to 60 minutes for the initial chaos to resolve, and then looking for a clear technical setup in the direction the fundamental data supports.
The Post-News Setup: A Practical Example
NFP comes in at 256,000 jobs vs 185,000 forecast. Wages also beat expectations. USD strengthens sharply. EUR/USD drops 120 pips in 2 minutes.
You do not trade this spike. You wait.
30 to 45 minutes later, EUR/USD has pulled back 40 pips from the post-NFP low and is approaching a key technical resistance level now acting as new supply. The trend is clearly downward and price is retesting a broken support level.
This is your setup. The fundamental data told you the direction. The instrument direction table confirmed EUR/USD typically falls on USD strength. The technical chart gave you the precise entry.
Section 6: Three Practical Frameworks for Using Fundamental Data
Here are three specific, actionable ways to incorporate fundamental analysis into your trading.
| Framework | Name | Best For | How It Works |
| Framework 1 | Macro Bias | Swing and position traders | Use fundamental backdrop to filter trade direction. Only take technical setups that align with the macro current. |
| Framework 2 | News Avoidance | All traders, especially beginners | Identify red events on calendar before each session. Close or protect positions before releases. |
| Framework 3 | Post-News Setup | Day and swing traders | Wait 30 to 60 minutes after a high-impact release, then look for a technical entry in the direction the data supports. |
Framework 1: Establishing a Macro Bias
A macro bias is a directional preference for a currency based on the overall fundamental picture, used to filter which technical setups you take. If the USD has a strong fundamental backdrop (rising rates, strong NFP, above-target CPI) you look for long USD setups on technical pullbacks. You trade with the fundamental current, not against it. Use the instrument direction table in Section 4B to quickly identify which instruments benefit from USD strength and which suffer.
Framework 2: News Avoidance as Risk Management
Check the Forex Factory calendar before every trading session. Identify all red events scheduled during your window. For each one, make one of three decisions:
- Option A: Close before the event. If you hold a profitable trade and a high-impact event on the same currency is coming within 30 minutes, consider taking profit or closing to avoid the reversal risk.
- Option B: Widen your stop. If you want to hold through the event, set a wider stop that accounts for the typical volatility range during that type of release.
- Option C: Wait until after. If you have no position and a red event is coming in the next 30 to 45 minutes, simply wait. The market will still be there after the release and you will often find a better post-news entry.
Framework 3: The Post-News Technical Setup
Once you have enough experience, use high-impact releases as setup generators rather than risks to avoid. Check Section 4B for the expected direction. Wait 20 to 60 minutes for the initial volatility to subside. Identify the new technical structure in the post-news price action. Look for a precise entry in the direction the data supports. Your trading plan entry criteria still apply. The fundamental data is context, not permission to abandon your rules.
Section 7: Fundamental Analysis for Forex, Crypto, and Synthetic Indices
Forex: The Full Fundamental Framework Applies
Everything covered in this guide applies directly to Forex trading. The instrument direction table in Section 4B covers the most commonly traded Forex pairs. For African traders, the pairs most commonly traded are EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY, and USD/CHF. All of these involve USD on one side, which means US events (NFP, CPI, FOMC, GDP, Retail Sales) matter most.
Crypto: A Different Set of Fundamentals
Crypto assets have become increasingly correlated with risk sentiment and inversely correlated with USD strength since 2022. The instrument direction table shows BTCUSD, ETHUSD, and BNBUSD typically falling when USD strengthens from strong economic data and rising during risk-on environments. Beyond USD correlation, crypto has its own fundamental drivers: Bitcoin halving cycles, regulatory developments, on-chain data, and exchange-level events. These do not appear on the Forex Factory calendar and require separate monitoring through crypto-specific news sources.
For more on crypto trading: How to Start Trading Crypto from Zero: The Complete Beginner’s Roadmap
Synthetic Indices: Where Fundamental Analysis Does Not Apply
Synthetic Indices such as Volatility 75, Boom 1000, Crash 500, and the Step Index are algorithmically generated instruments running on a Random Number Generator. They are not connected to any real-world economy, central bank, or economic data release. NFP, CPI, FOMC, GDP, and every other fundamental event covered in this guide have absolutely zero effect on Synthetic Indices. This is one of the core reasons why Synthetic Indices have become popular among African traders: they can be traded 24 hours a day with no news risk and no economic calendar to monitor.
Synthetic Indices and News: The Bottom Line
Do not check the economic calendar before trading Synthetic Indices. Economic news has no impact on them whatsoever.
Do check the calendar if you are also holding Forex or Crypto positions in the same session, because those will be affected.
The absence of fundamental risk is a feature of Synthetic Indices, not a limitation.
For more on Synthetic Indices: How to Start Trading Synthetic Indices from Zero: The Complete Beginner’s Roadmap
Section 8: The Daily Fundamental Analysis Routine
Understanding fundamental analysis conceptually is one thing. Building it into a consistent daily practice is another. Here is a practical routine that keeps you informed without requiring hours of financial news consumption.
Every Morning Before Your Session (5 Minutes)
- Open Forex Factory and filter to red events only: Set your timezone so the times shown match your local time. Filter to high-impact events only.
- Check what is scheduled during your trading window: If you trade the London session from 11:00 AM EAT, check for red events between 11:00 AM and 7:00 PM EAT.
- Make your pre-session decision: For each red event, decide in advance whether to trade around it, avoid the 30 minutes before and after, or close existing positions beforehand.
- Cross-reference the instrument direction table: For the currencies affected by the scheduled events, check Section 4B to remind yourself of the likely direction on a beat or miss.
After a High-Impact Release During Your Session
- Read actual vs forecast immediately: When the event releases, check Forex Factory for the actual figure. Calculate the beat or miss.
- Wait for initial volatility to resolve: Do not trade in the first 60 to 90 seconds after a high-impact release.
- Look for a post-news technical setup: If the data supports a directional move and you see a clear technical setup forming in the same direction, this confluence is your entry opportunity. Your trading plan criteria still apply.
Every Sunday Before the Trading Week (10 Minutes)
Read the DailyFX weekly Forex outlook. This professional analyst summary covers all major high-impact events scheduled for the coming week and provides context about the current macro backdrop for each major currency pair. It takes 10 to 15 minutes and gives you a professional framework for the week’s fundamental landscape before you open a single chart.
Section 9: The Most Common Fundamental Analysis Mistakes Beginners Make
Mistake 1: Reacting to the Headline Number Without Checking the Forecast
A beginner sees that NFP came in at 200,000 jobs and thinks that sounds strong. They buy USD. What they missed is that the forecast was 250,000 jobs. NFP missed by 50,000. The actual result was weaker than expected and USD sold off despite the nominally positive headline. Always compare Actual to Forecast, not Actual to zero or to your own mental benchmark.
Mistake 2: Trading the Initial Spike
The 60 seconds immediately following a major economic release are one of the most dangerous trading environments that exist. Spreads are extreme, execution is unreliable, and the initial direction frequently reverses. Beginners should watch the first 20 to 30 minutes, understand the reaction, and only then look for setups.
Mistake 3: Ignoring the Economic Calendar Completely
Some beginners decide that fundamental analysis is too complex and simply ignore the economic calendar. They then wonder why their technically perfect setups keep getting stopped out by volatility spikes. The solution is not to become a fundamental analyst. The solution is to spend two minutes every morning checking for red events during your session.
Mistake 4: Not Using the Instrument Direction Table
Many traders know that a news event released positively for USD but then take the wrong direction because they trade a USD/xxx pair (where USD strength means the pair rises) and apply the same thinking to an xxx/USD pair (where USD strength means the pair falls). The instrument direction table in Section 4B exists to eliminate this confusion. Refer to it before every news session until the logic becomes instinctive.
Mistake 5: Applying Forex Fundamental Analysis to Synthetic Indices
As noted in Section 7, fundamental analysis does not apply to Synthetic Indices. Checking the calendar before a Deriv Synthetics session is unnecessary unless you are also holding Forex or Crypto positions that will be affected.
Final Thought
Fundamental analysis does not require a degree in economics. At the beginner level, it requires two things: understanding what the major events are and what they measure, and checking the economic calendar for two minutes before every trading session.
The instrument direction table in Section 4B gives you a practical reference for any instrument you trade. The three frameworks in Section 6 give you specific ways to act on what you learn. The daily routine in Section 8 gives you a sustainable practice that fits into any trading schedule.
Combine these with the technical analysis skills covered in your AfroTrader Academy Forex course and you will be operating with a complete picture of the markets you trade. The wind direction and the sail both working together.
Risk Warning & Disclaimer
Trading Forex, Synthetic Indices, Cryptocurrencies and other leveraged financial instruments involves substantial risk and may not be suitable for all individuals. Leveraged trading can result in losses that exceed your initial capital. At AfroTrader Academy, we emphasize risk management, discipline and long-term consistency not shortcuts or guaranteed profits. The Academy provides educational content only and does not offer financial or investment advice. All trading decisions are the sole responsibility of the individual trader. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Please read our full Risk Disclosure and Disclaimer.
AfroTrader Academy is a professional trading education platform built to equip new and intermediate traders with the knowledge, structure, and discipline required to navigate modern financial markets. We focus on education over hype, process over profits, and skill development over shortcuts. Our mission is to help traders build a solid foundation, understand market behaviour, and develop repeatable trading frameworks they can apply independently.
