2017 Economic Calendar
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U.S. & Intl Recaps   |   Event Definitions   |   Today's Calendar

"Housing suddenly pivoting sharply higher"
"Wage growth nowhere but consumers on a spending spree"
"Labor pool shrinks but still no wage traction"
"Taxes, profits, wages; breaking apart the mix"
"Some signals slow but year-end momentum still in place"
"Year-end economy picking up steam but inflation still flat"
"Simply Economics is taking the November 10 week off."
"Available labor limited but wage traction still elusive"
"Hurricanes came and went, economic signals positive"
"Manufacturing and its separate stories"
"Core CPI modest though caution the call"
"Over heating and wage inflation"
"Core inflation crunch"
"Data point to December hike"
"Blame Harvey and Irma"
"Settling in for hurricanes"
"Harvey strikes but economy solid"
"Manufacturing improves, housing doesn't"
"Economy solid, Washington scrambled"
"In search of inflation"
"Second half pace begins"
"Getting more for your Q2 money"
"Housing improves, inflation doesn't"
"Q2 and the big dipper"
"Who needs a raise anyway?"
"May, lifeless and weak"
"Housing warms up"
"Turn for the worse"
"Obligatory rate hike"
"Transitory weakness and its persistence"
"Eating away at your GDP"
"Manufacturing momentum"
"The less-than-great snapback"
"Of strengths and weaknesses"
"Playing from behind"
"Strength and weaknesses, real and indicated"
"Consumer lying low"
"The job madness of March"
"Fast talk, slow winter"
"An ordinary quarter"
"The polarized consumer"
"Hike assured but currency impact the question"
"Anecdotal exaggeration"
"Housing remix"
"Inflation, new kid on the block"
"Wrong side of the trade flow"
"How much slack is there really?"
"The consumer economy"
"Price traction alert!"
"Santa gives out cars"
"Wage traction"
"Year-end fade"
Archive 2016 >>


Weekly recap of U.S. market activity and events. This weekly article reviews the U.S. equity and bond markets, followed by a table displaying changing levels in key market indexes, and commentary on the economic indicators released during the week. Simply Economics includes a Bottom Line, a synopsis describing what the activity during the week may mean for the markets going forward.
Covers important events in the equity, bond, and currency markets by geographic area through the use of charts, tables and text. Investors are provided with a view of the changing levels of Global Stock Market Indexes from week to week and as a percentage change in the current year. An Economic Scoreboard surveys economic indicators released in regions around the globe. The Bottom Line provides investors with a synopsis describing what the activity during the week may mean for the markets in the future.
This article provides a short description of the equity and bond markets during the month and indicates what the major events (earnings announcements or economic indicators) caused bond and stock prices to fluctuate over the period.