US Existing Home Sales May Experience Further Declines

US existing home sales declined to 3.96 million, hindered by limited inventory and housing affordability. Core durable goods orders held at 0.5%, indicating manufacturing sector stability amid rising rates and high inflation. Germany's GDP dipped to -0.1%, raising recession concerns.
PU Prime | 709 days ago

Tuesday, 21 Nov, 17:00 - US Existing Home Sales (Oct) 

US existing home sales fell to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.96 million. Economists suggest that, as seen throughout the year, constrained inventory and reduced housing affordability are ongoing challenges for home sales. There is a likelihood of further declines in sales.

Wednesday, 22 Nov, 15:30 - US Core Durable Goods Orders (MoM) (Oct)

The most recent core durable goods orders maintain the same rate as the previous figure, which is 0.5%. This suggests a level of stability in the U.S. manufacturing sector, even in the face of rapidly rising interest rates and persistently high inflation.

Friday, 24 Nov, 09:00 - EU German GDP (QoQ) (Q3)

The recent GDP showed -0.1%, down from the previous reading of 0.1%. Recent research indicates that Germany's GDP health deteriorated further in October, amplifying concerns among analysts about the country potentially entering a recession.

PU Prime
Type: STP, ECN, NDD, DMA
Regulation: FSA (Seychelles), ASIC (Australia), FSCA (South Africa), FSC (Mauritius)
read more
All Eyes on US CPI as Market Volatility Builds | 24th October 2025

All Eyes on US CPI as Market Volatility Builds | 24th October 2025

Global markets traded cautiously as investors awaited the key US CPI inflation report for clues on the Fed’s next policy move. The Dollar stayed below 99.00, gold and silver softened, and AUD/NZD traded sideways amid thin volumes. A cooler CPI could lift metals and risk assets, while a hotter print may strengthen the greenback.
Moneta Markets | 2 days ago
Investors lock gaze on US inflation data

Investors lock gaze on US inflation data

Investors maintain more dovish view on rates than the Fed - Accelerating inflation could change that and help the dollar - Pound, yen extend their slides, euro rebounds on improving PMIs - Wall Street gains as White House confirms Trump-Xi meeting
XM Group | 2 days ago