How to Read the Economic Calendar
What's actually on the calendar
The economic calendar collects scheduled market events — rate decisions, inflation prints, jobs reports — on one page. News tells you what already happened; the calendar tells you what is guaranteed to happen, with a date and time published in advance. These are the only market events you can genuinely prepare for.
As of July 17, 2026 the calendar tracks 37 events, 23 of them upcoming. The composition tells you what it is for: 18 monetary-policy events, 14 inflation prints, 3 growth releases, 2 employment reports — spread across the US (21), EU (6), Japan (5), Korea (3), and China (2). That skew is deliberate. Central banks and inflation are what move crypto and equities together, so the calendar is curated around them rather than trying to list every minor release on earth.
What the importance tiers mean
Each event carries a high / medium / low importance tier. High means the kind of release that moves everything at once on the day — FOMC decisions, US CPI, nonfarm payrolls, ECB rate calls. Medium is confirmation-grade data; low is niche.
"Should I trust an AI-assigned importance grade?" is a fair question, and we can answer it with data from the news side of the site. When we check the 0–100 importance scores our AI puts on news stories against verified 24-hour outcomes (trailing 90 days, as of July 17, 2026), accuracy rises monotonically with the grade: 49.6% for calls scored in the 60s, 54.5% in the 70s, and 55.5% at 80+. That is not a claim of infallibility — it is evidence that the grading carries real signal, which makes the tiers a sound way to budget your attention. Read the high-tier events properly; skim the rest.
AI pre-briefings and the 24–48h window
Some events carry an AI-written pre-briefing — 12 of the 37 at the time of writing. The gap is by design: previews are generated roughly 24–48 hours before the event, not weeks out, so they reflect the market context that actually exists going into the release. Write one too early and it goes stale. That is why, as this guide is written, the July 23 ECB rate decision shows no preview yet — it will be generated automatically inside the final-day window.
A preview is not a prediction; it is a two-sided scenario map. The one attached to the July 14 US CPI event (June 2026 data) is a good template: a hawkish surprise — inflation hotter than expected — could pressure BTC and the S&P 500 lower while boosting the dollar and gold; a dovish surprise — cooler than expected — could support risk assets and weaken the dollar. The point is to know, before the number drops, what reacts and in which direction under either branch.
Consensus vs. actual: the gap is what moves markets
The most common beginner mistake is reading releases in absolute terms — "3.5% inflation is high, so that's bearish." Markets price in the expected number (the consensus) long before the release. What moves prices at the moment of publication is the gap between expectation and actual, not the level itself.
Mid-July 2026 is a textbook case from our own ledger. In the two days before the CPI release, four separate "Fed's Waller signals rate hikes" stories hit the wire; our AI scored all four bearish (DOWN) at importance 90. The S&P 500 rose +0.38% anyway, and all four calls sit in the public verification ledger as misses. Hawkish talk was already in the price. Then the actual CPI came in soft — inflation easing to 3.5% — and the resulting "stocks gain as inflation eases" story (importance 90, bullish) was a verified hit. Same week, same market: the telegraphed rhetoric moved nothing, the surprise against consensus did.
Dovish/hawkish scenario thinking
The practical routine is simple. Before any high-tier event, write down both branches:
- Hawkish branch: inflation or jobs come in hotter than consensus → rate-cut hopes fade → pressure on risk assets (equities, crypto), dollar bid.
- Dovish branch: data comes in cooler → easing expectations build → risk assets supported.
Then add the layer the Waller episode teaches: account for how much is already priced in. If a week of hawkish speeches preceded the release, a hawkish print may land flat while even a mildly dovish one triggers a sharp rally. The goal of scenario thinking is not to guess the number — it is to not be surprised thirty seconds after the release. For reading how the overall news flow tilts around an event, see the Bull-Bear Index guide.
Know the limits
Honestly: most events on our calendar do not currently display consensus or prior values, so for precise gap analysis you should check a consensus figure from an external source shortly before the release. Previews are AI-drafted scenario maps, not forecasts — and across all our AI's calls, the verified 24-hour hit rate over the trailing 90 days is 52.9% (as of July 17, 2026). That is a modest edge over a coin flip, and we publish it even when it is unflattering; the full methodology is in the verified accuracy guide. Treat the calendar as a preparation tool that tilts the odds, never as a guarantee.
This guide is informational only, not investment advice. See our Editorial Policy & Disclaimer.