Read more
6:17 AM · 8 September 2020

Economic calendar: US traders return from holiday

  • European markets seen opening higher

  • US traders return from long weekend

  • European Q2 GDP report revision

European markets are seen opening higher and building onto yesterday's gains. Economic calendar on Tuesday looks bare as European Q2 GDP report revision and South African Q2 GDP report are the only noteworthy releases scheduled. Nevertheless, some action may be present in the early afternoon as US traders are returning from a long week. This will be the first Wall Street session after Tesla failed to get included into S&P 500 index so traders may want to pay more attention to tech stocks today.

10:00 am BST - Euro area, GDP report for Q2 2020 (second revision). First revision: -12.1% QoQ

10:30 am BST - South Africa, GDP report for Q2 2020. Expected: -16.5% YoY

Asian session ahead

2:30 am BST - China, inflation report for August. 

  • CPI. Expected: 2.4% YoY. Previous: 2.7% YoY

  • PPI. Expected: -2% YoY. Previous: -2.4% YoY

2 December 2025, 10:10 AM

BREAKING: EURUSD with limited reaction to near-consensus CPI data from the eurozone 🔎

2 December 2025, 8:38 AM

Economic calendar: Eurozone CPI flash data reading in focus

2 December 2025, 7:02 AM

BREAKING: UK house prices growth beats expectations

1 December 2025, 3:02 PM

BREAKING: EURUSD ticks higher after weaker US ISM report 🔎

Join over 2 000 000 XTB Group Clients from around the world

The financial instruments we offer, especially CFDs, can be highly risky. Fractional Shares (FS) is an acquired from XTB fiduciary right to fractional parts of stocks and ETFs. FS are not a separate financial instrument. The limited corporate rights are associated with FS.
This page was not created for investors residing in Brazil. This brokerage is not authorized by the Comissão de Valores Mobiliários (CVM) or the Brazilian Central Bank (BCB). The content of this page should not be characterized as an investment offer in Brazil or for investors residing in that country.
Losses can exceed deposits