Expert Guide

Fundamental Analysis: Economic Drivers

Understand how economic data, central bank policies, and geopolitical events impact currency prices. Learn to trade the news and anticipate market-moving events.

Written by Professional Traders
20 min read
Last updated: 6/2/2026

Fundamental Analysis: Economic Drivers

Introduction

Fundamental analysis examines economic, social, and political forces that affect currency supply and demand. Unlike technical analysis which focuses on price charts, fundamental analysis looks at the underlying factors that drive currency values.

Core Concepts

Supply and Demand

Currency values are determined by supply and demand:

  • High demand + Low supply = Currency appreciates
  • Low demand + High supply = Currency depreciates

Factors affecting supply and demand:

  • Interest rates
  • Economic growth
  • Political stability
  • Trade balances
  • Market sentiment

Interest Rate Differential

One of the most important concepts in forex:

  • Higher interest rates attract foreign capital
  • Investors seek higher returns
  • Increased demand strengthens the currency

Example: If US rates are 5% and EU rates are 2%, investors may prefer USD, strengthening it against EUR.

Key Economic Indicators

1. Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

Measures total economic output:

  • Strong GDP growth = Strong currency
  • Weak GDP growth = Weak currency

Release frequency: Quarterly Impact: High

2. Employment Data

Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) - US

  • Monthly employment report
  • One of the most market-moving indicators
  • Strong employment = strong economy = strong currency

Unemployment Rate

  • Percentage of workforce without jobs
  • Lower unemployment = stronger currency

3. Inflation Indicators

Consumer Price Index (CPI)

  • Measures change in consumer prices
  • High inflation may lead to interest rate hikes
  • Moderate inflation (2%) is healthy

Producer Price Index (PPI)

  • Measures wholesale price changes
  • Leading indicator for CPI

4. Retail Sales

  • Measures consumer spending
  • Strong retail sales = strong economy
  • Consumer spending drives 60-70% of GDP in developed economies

5. Manufacturing Data

Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI)

  • Survey of purchasing managers
  • Above 50 = expansion
  • Below 50 = contraction

Industrial Production

  • Measures factory output
  • Indicates economic health

6. Trade Balance

  • Exports minus imports
  • Trade surplus (exports > imports) = positive for currency
  • Trade deficit (imports > exports) = negative for currency

7. Consumer Confidence

  • Measures consumer optimism
  • High confidence = more spending = stronger economy

Central Banks and Monetary Policy

Major Central Banks

  1. Federal Reserve (Fed) - United States
  2. European Central Bank (ECB) - Eurozone
  3. Bank of England (BoE) - United Kingdom
  4. Bank of Japan (BoJ) - Japan
  5. Swiss National Bank (SNB) - Switzerland

Monetary Policy Tools

1. Interest Rates

The primary tool for controlling money supply:

  • Rate hikes: Strengthen currency (attract foreign capital)
  • Rate cuts: Weaken currency (encourage borrowing and spending)

2. Quantitative Easing (QE)

Central bank buys assets to inject money into economy:

  • Increases money supply
  • Generally weakens currency
  • Used during economic crises

3. Forward Guidance

Central bank communication about future policy:

  • "Hawkish" (favoring rate hikes) = bullish for currency
  • "Dovish" (favoring rate cuts) = bearish for currency

Central Bank Meetings

Key events to watch:

  • FOMC meetings (Fed) - 8 times per year
  • ECB meetings - 8 times per year
  • BoE meetings - 8 times per year
  • BoJ meetings - 8 times per year

What to watch for:

  • Interest rate decisions
  • Policy statements
  • Press conferences
  • Economic projections

Geopolitical Events

Political Stability

  • Elections
  • Government changes
  • Political crises
  • Policy changes

Impact: Uncertainty weakens currency, stability strengthens it.

Geopolitical Tensions

  • Wars and conflicts
  • Trade disputes
  • Sanctions
  • International relations

Safe-haven currencies (strengthen during uncertainty):

  • USD
  • JPY
  • CHF

Brexit Example

The UK's exit from the EU caused:

  • GBP volatility
  • Uncertainty about trade relationships
  • Economic concerns
  • Years of market impact

Trading the News

Economic Calendar

Use an economic calendar to track:

  • Release dates and times
  • Previous values
  • Forecasts
  • Actual values

High-impact events:

  • NFP (US employment)
  • CPI (inflation)
  • GDP releases
  • Central bank decisions
  • Interest rate announcements

News Trading Strategies

1. Fade the Initial Move

  • Wait for initial volatility to settle
  • Trade the reversal if overreaction occurs

2. Breakout Trading

  • Trade the direction of the news
  • Enter on breakout of pre-news range

3. Avoid Trading

  • Some traders avoid high-impact news
  • Spreads widen, volatility increases
  • Risk of slippage

Interpreting News

Better than expected:

  • Positive for currency
  • Example: GDP 3.5% vs forecast 3.0%

Worse than expected:

  • Negative for currency
  • Example: Unemployment 5.5% vs forecast 5.0%

In line with expectations:

  • Minimal impact
  • Market already priced in

Correlation Between Markets

Stock Markets

  • Strong stocks often = strong currency
  • Risk-on sentiment benefits growth currencies (AUD, NZD, CAD)
  • Risk-off sentiment benefits safe havens (USD, JPY, CHF)

Commodity Prices

Commodity Currencies:

  • AUD: Gold, iron ore
  • CAD: Oil
  • NZD: Dairy products

Rising commodity prices strengthen these currencies.

Bond Yields

  • Higher yields attract foreign investment
  • Strengthens currency
  • Watch 10-year government bond yields

Fundamental Analysis in Practice

Long-term Positioning

Fundamental analysis is best for:

  • Position trading (weeks to months)
  • Understanding market context
  • Identifying major trends

Combining with Technical Analysis

Best approach:

  1. Use fundamentals to determine direction
  2. Use technicals for entry/exit timing
  3. Manage risk with stop-losses

Example Analysis: EUR/USD

Fundamental factors:

  • Fed raising rates (bullish USD)
  • ECB keeping rates low (bearish EUR)
  • US economy growing faster than EU
  • Conclusion: Bearish EUR/USD

Technical confirmation:

  • Downtrend on daily chart
  • Price below 200 EMA
  • Resistance at 1.1000
  • Entry: Short on resistance test

Common Mistakes

  1. Ignoring the bigger picture

    • Focus on major trends, not every data point
  2. Overreacting to single data points

    • Look at trends over time
  3. Not understanding market expectations

    • It's not just the number, it's vs. expectations
  4. Forgetting about technical levels

    • Fundamentals give direction, technicals give timing
  5. Trading every news release

    • Focus on high-impact events

Resources for Fundamental Analysis

Economic Calendars

  • Forex Factory
  • Investing.com
  • DailyFX
  • Trading Economics

Central Bank Websites

  • federalreserve.gov (Fed)
  • ecb.europa.eu (ECB)
  • bankofengland.co.uk (BoE)
  • boj.or.jp (BoJ)

News Sources

  • Bloomberg
  • Reuters
  • Financial Times
  • Wall Street Journal

Conclusion

Fundamental analysis helps you understand WHY currencies move. By monitoring economic indicators, central bank policies, and geopolitical events, you can:

  • Identify long-term trends
  • Anticipate major market moves
  • Make informed trading decisions
  • Understand market context

Remember: Markets are forward-looking. They react to expectations and future possibilities, not just current data. Stay informed, be patient, and combine fundamental analysis with sound risk management for the best results.

The most successful traders use both fundamental and technical analysis. Fundamentals tell you what to trade, technicals tell you when to trade it.

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