Today's economic data presents a mixed outlook with significant high-impact announcements. The United States shows declining consumer sentiment, which may weigh on future spending. In the UK, trade balance figures are slightly improving in the non-EU segment but declining overall, indicating trade challenges. Germany's unchanged CPI indicates stable, yet muted inflation dynamics.
Event | Date (NY) | Previous | Actual | Estimate | Change | Impact |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Michigan Consumer Sentiment (Sep) | 2025-09-12 14:00:00 | 58.2 | 55.4 | 58 | -2.8 | High |
Event | Date (NY) | Previous | Actual | Estimate | Change | Impact |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Goods Trade Balance Non-EU (Jul) | 2025-09-12 06:00:00 | -10.78 B | -10.16 B | -10.2 B | 0.62 B | High |
Goods Trade Balance (Jul) | 2025-09-12 06:00:00 | -22.16 B | -22.24 B | -21.75 B | -0.08 B | High |
Gross Domestic Product MoM (Jul) | 2025-09-12 06:00:00 | 0.4% | 0% | 0.1% | -0.4% | High |
Event | Date (NY) | Previous | Actual | Estimate | Change | Impact |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CPI (Aug) | 2025-09-12 06:00:00 | 0.3% | 0.1% | 0.1% | -0.2% | High |
The current data paints a cautious picture for the major currencies. The US Dollar faces potential headwinds due to declining consumer sentiment, while the British Pound is under pressure from mixed trade and GDP signals. Meanwhile, stable inflation could provide some support to the Euro. Overall, today's data might be neutral to slightly bearish for these currencies.