The following are the most recent pieces of Forex fundamental analysis from around the world. The Forex fundamental analysis below covers the various currencies on the market and the most recent events, announcements, and global developments that affect the Forex market.
Forex Fundamental Analysis
Forex Fundamental Analysis
Last week was a negative affair for the world’s major stock markets.
Japan is the world’s third largest economy behind America’s and China’s.
The process of electing the 751 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) that represent the 28 member states of the EU and its 508 million citizens gets underway today
The UK is living on borrowed time. It was due to leave the EU on the 29th of March 2019, but a key piece of legislation, the EU Withdrawal Bill could not be passed.
Since 2017, the Republic of Austria has been ruled by the Volkspartei of Austria (VPO) ruling in a controversial coalition with the Freedom Party
Last week was a mixed affair for the world’s major stock markets. The breakdown of talks on Brexit between the opposition and government sent Sterling lower.
For a number of weeks now, senior figures in the government have been in discussion with their Labour opposite numbers, led by the shadow Brexit Secretary, Sir Kier Starmer.
The German economy is the dominant economy of the Eurozone and the wider EU and is estimated to be worth approximately $4.2 trillion in 2019
On the back of the industrial revolution, steel making in the UK grew to be the fifth largest steel manufacturing concern in the world, a rank it held as recently as the late 1960s.
The UK economy has indeed managed to pick up the pace of its expansion over Q4 2018, as predicted earlier.
Last week was a negative affair for the world’s major stock markets in the wake of the US’s decision to ramp up further tariffs on Chinese imports.
Despite the fact that trade discussions between the USA and China were actually taking place on American soil yesterday, the Trump administration has gone ahead with its threat to increase sanctions of Chinese imports to the USA.
Donald Trump has long espoused the simplistic view that if the USA engages in a trade war (or, seemingly, many trade wars) it will quickly emerge victorious with its “enemies” capitulating to what the US wants.
According to official figures from the US Department of Labor, the unemployment rate in the USA for April has fallen to 3.6%.
Last week was another mixed affair for the world’s major stock markets.