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Top Economic Events to Watch | March 23 - 27, 2026

Markets shift focus from rate decisions to key PMI and CPI data. Discover the 3 major macro events shaping USD, AUD, and GBP this week.

Updated March 23, 2026

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Gladys Eguia

Gladys Eguia

Last week was a masterclass in central bank signaling. While the Reserve Bank of Australia was the only major player to actually pull the trigger on a rate hike (thanks to unexpectedly sticky inflation), the rest of the pack held steady—but with a distinctly cautious, hawkish undertone.

Policymakers are clearly sweating a potential inflation resurgence, and that "hawkish hold" narrative is keeping the US Dollar firmly bid. Now, the talking stops and the data takes over. This week, the spotlight shifts from rate decisions to hard PMI and CPI numbers. If the data shows inflation pressures building back up, expect the current macro trends to double down and risk assets to feel the squeeze.

Here are the top 3 macroeconomic events you need on your radar this week, including where the forecasts stand right now:

1. US Manufacturing PMI (Tuesday, Mar 24)

What it is: The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) is a leading indicator of economic health for the manufacturing sector. As the saying goes, when the US sneezes, the global markets catch a cold. With the dollar already flexing its strength, traders will be laser-focused on this print.

Current Status & Forecast: Markets expect the US Manufacturing PMI for March to come in at 51.2, slightly down from February’s reading of 51.6. The index is hovering dangerously close to the 50.0 threshold, which separates economic expansion from contraction.

The Trade Setup: A reading below 51.0 could stoke fears of a pronounced economic slowdown, likely weighing on Treasury yields and dragging the US Dollar down. Conversely, a surprise print above 51.5—especially if the "prices paid" sub-index comes in hot—would reinforce the narrative of US economic resilience and demand-pull inflation. This validates the central bank's "higher for longer" stance, likely sparking a dollar rally and putting heavy pressure on equities and crypto.

2. Australia CPI (Wednesday, Mar 25)

What it is: The Consumer Price Index is the ultimate yardstick for inflation, and this is arguably the most dramatic data point of the week because of the immediate context.

Current Status & Forecast: This release covers February's inflation data. The consensus expects a slight cooling in headline inflation to around 3.6% year-over-year, down from January's uncomfortably hot 3.8% print.

The Trade Setup: Last week, the RBA shocked markets by hiking the cash rate by 25 basis points to 4.10%. It was a tight decision driven by fears that inflation is getting entrenched. Traders will be hyper-focused on sticky components like housing, services, and electricity. If the CPI holds at 3.8% or higher, it entirely vindicates the RBA's aggressive hike and could send the Aussie Dollar (AUD) surging as markets price in even more tightening. If it misses to the downside, look for intense volatility in AUD crosses as last week's hike starts to look like a policy misstep.

3. UK CPI (Wednesday, Mar 25)

What it is: The primary gauge of inflation for the British economy. The Bank of England (BoE) is walking a tightrope right now, trying to balance sluggish economic growth with stubbornly high price pressures.

Current Status & Forecast: The BoE just voted unanimously to keep rates unchanged at 3.75%, but the tone was aggressively hawkish. Analysts expect UK headline inflation for February to hover between 2.9% and 3.1% year-over-year, compared to January's 3.0%.

The Trade Setup: Underlying services inflation has been a massive thorn in the BoE's side. Because policymakers held rates but signaled they are watching inflation risks closely, this is the exact CPI print that could force their hand at the next meeting. If core and services numbers fail to cool, it feeds directly into the BoE's worst stagflation fears. A hot number here will solidify rate hike expectations for the rest of the year, trigger a swift repricing in the UK gilt market, and send violent shockwaves through GBP/USD and EUR/GBP pairs.

IMPORTANT NOTICE: Any news, opinions, research, analyses, prices or other information contained in this article are provided as general market commentary and do not constitute investment advice. The market commentary has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research, and therefore, it is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of dissemination. Past performance is not an indication of possible future performance. Any action you take upon the information in this article is strictly at your own risk, and we will not be liable for any losses and damages in connection with the use of this article.

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