
Forex Week Ahead (May 19-23): Quiet Start Gives Way to FOMC Minutes and Global PMI Blitz
A skeletal economic calendar and Canadian holiday set the tone Monday, but traders brace for Wednesday's FOMC Minutes and Thursday's flash PMI wave

The trading week of May 19-23, 2026 opens quietly with Victoria Day closures in Canada, but builds toward key risk events including the April FOMC Minutes release and flash PMI data across six major economies. Geopolitical tensions and energy price volatility remain the dominant wildcards.
The forex calendar for the week of May 19-23, 2026 presents an unusual rhythm: a near-empty Monday slate giving way to concentrated midweek volatility as FOMC Meeting Minutes and global flash PMI data converge. After a turbulent prior week that saw the US Dollar Index climb above 99 on hotter cpi" title="Understanding inflation and CPI in forex">inflation data and surging Treasury yields, traders enter the new week with a wary eye on geopolitical updates and a light but impactful macro schedule.
Monday, May 18: Victoria Day Void
The week begins with minimal scheduled data across all three major trading sessions. Canadian markets are closed for Victoria Day, a federal holiday that falls on the Monday preceding May 25. This reduces liquidity in CAD pairs during North American hours—expect wider spreads and muted activity in USD/CAD, which has been consolidating near 1.3750 amid the tug-of-war between oil price strength and monetary policy divergence.
With no tier-one releases on Monday, market direction will be dictated by geopolitical developments, particularly updates from the Middle East where tensions between the US and Iran continue to support elevated crude prices. Brent crude remains above $110/barrel after the recent Barakah nuclear facility attack escalated conflict fears, keeping energy-sensitive currencies like the Norwegian krone and Canadian dollar under cross-pressure.
Tuesday, May 20: UK Employment and Canadian CPI
The Asian session stays quiet Tuesday, but volatility picks up shortly after the London open with UK employment data. Traders will scrutinize job growth, wage inflation, and the unemployment rate for signals on Bank of England policy trajectory. GBP/USD has been testing the 1.35 support level after pulling back from 1.3650 highs; stronger-than-expected employment figures could provide the pound with a defensive bid against continued dollar strength.
The North American session shifts focus to Canada as Canadian CPI data drops Tuesday morning. With the Bank of Canada having held rates steady amid elevated energy costs, any upside surprise in inflation could reignite tightening speculation and lift the loonie. USD/CAD traders should also watch for cross-flow impacts from the oil-dollar relationship as crude prices remain elevated.
Later Tuesday, US Pending Home Sales numbers are due—a secondary indicator but one worth monitoring given the sharp rise in mortgage rates tied to the recent Treasury yield surge.
Wednesday, May 21: UK Inflation and FOMC Minutes Take Center Stage
Wednesday's Asian session features China's Loan Prime Rate decision, though the People's Bank of China is widely expected to hold rates steady following April's disappointing retail sales and industrial output prints. Any surprise cut could offer short-term relief to commodity currencies like AUD/USD, which has been pressured by weakening Chinese demand.
The London morning delivers the week's most significant UK data: CPI and PPI releases. With inflation proving sticky across G10 economies due to energy shocks, a hot UK CPI print could force the market to reassess Bank of England cut expectations. Inflation dynamics are now the primary driver of central bank policy divergence—watch for immediate volatility in GBP crosses.
The day's headline event arrives late Wednesday: the April FOMC Meeting Minutes. This release carries exceptional weight after the April meeting featured a historic four dissenting votes, signaling deep internal division over the Fed's rate path. Markets will parse every line for clues on whether incoming Fed Chair Kevin Warsh—confirmed just days ago—faces immediate pressure to shift toward a hawkish stance given the 3.8% CPI print that erased June rate cut odds.
With USD/JPY hovering near 158 and the 10-year Treasury yield above 4.6%, any hawkish tilt in the Minutes could push the yen back toward intervention territory and extend the dollar's rally. Conversely, dovish language emphasizing patience could trigger profit-taking on dollar longs.
Also Wednesday: the Weekly Crude Oil Inventory report, which has taken on outsized importance given the Iran war premium baked into energy markets.
Thursday, May 22: Global PMI Blitz and Australian Employment
Thursday marks the busiest data day of the week with flash Manufacturing and Services PMI readings due from Australia, France, Germany, the Eurozone, the UK, and the United States. These S&P Global surveys provide the earliest read on economic momentum for May and will be scrutinized for evidence of growth deceleration amid rising energy costs and tighter financial conditions.
- Australian PMI and Employment: Australia's data dump begins early, with both flash PMI and April employment figures landing in the Asian session. The Reserve Bank of Australia has held rates at 4.35% despite inflation pressures; weak employment data could weigh on the Aussie, which has already suffered from disappointing Chinese activity prints.
- European PMI wave: French, German, and Eurozone-wide PMI data arrive mid-morning London time. Eurozone growth has been fragile, and any sub-50 manufacturing print (contraction territory) could pressure EUR/USD further below the 1.16 level it broke last week.
- UK PMI: Services PMI is particularly critical for the UK given the economy's heavy services tilt. A sharp slowdown would complicate the BOE's inflation-growth balancing act.
- US PMI: The final PMI release of the day comes from the US, alongside the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index and Weekly Unemployment Claims. With the Fed now in blackout ahead of the next meeting, data takes on added importance. A resilient services PMI would support the "higher-for-longer" interest rate narrative driving dollar strength.
Thursday's data cluster has the potential to trigger coordinated moves across multiple currency pairs—traders should prepare for elevated volatility and watch for positioning squeezes as the market reprices growth expectations.
Friday, May 23: Retail Sales and Risk Sentiment
The week closes with a lighter calendar. UK and Canadian Retail Sales data provide final datapoints on consumer resilience amid higher borrowing costs and energy bills. For the pound, strong retail sales would reinforce the case for sustained BOE caution on rate cuts. For the loonie, retail strength could offset some of the pressure from oil-driven inflation.
The US session wraps the week with revised University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment data—typically a market mover only if the revision is significant.
More importantly, Friday's price action will likely reflect positioning ahead of the weekend, with traders mindful of geopolitical tail risks. Any escalation in the Iran conflict or surprise energy market developments could drive safe-haven flows into the dollar and trigger sharp moves in commodity currencies.
Geopolitical Wildcard: Iran Tensions and Energy Markets
Throughout the week, geopolitical updates will serve as the primary wildcard. The Iran war premium has pushed WTI crude above $105 and Brent above $110, driving a cascade of effects: higher Treasury yields, stronger dollar safe-haven demand, and pressure on oil-importing economies.
Markets have priced in elevated energy costs, but any further escalation—or conversely, credible ceasefire signals—could trigger violent repricing. EUR/USD, AUD/USD, and USD/JPY remain particularly sensitive to risk sentiment shifts.
Key Levels to Watch
- EUR/USD: Support at 1.1600 is critical. A break below would target 1.1500 and confirm the bearish trend continuation.
- GBP/USD: The 1.35 level has held on multiple tests; a decisive break could accelerate selling toward 1.34.
- USD/JPY: Watch 158.77—the intervention threshold tested in prior BOJ action. A sustained break higher risks official intervention.
- USD/CAD: Consolidating near 1.3750 with support at 1.37 and resistance at 1.38.
- US Dollar Index (DXY): Trading near 99.27 after breaking above 99.00; next resistance at 100.00 psychological level.
Trading Strategy: Patience and Positioning
This week rewards patience. Monday's thin calendar and Canadian holiday reduce actionable opportunities, but Wednesday's FOMC Minutes and Thursday's PMI wave create defined catalysts for breakout or reversal trades.
For dollar bulls, the narrative remains intact: sticky inflation, rising yields, and safe-haven demand. But stretched positioning (speculative net longs near multi-month highs) means any dovish surprise from the FOMC or weak US PMI data could trigger sharp profit-taking.
For dollar bears, the case hinges on either a deceleration signal from US data or a geopolitical de-escalation that pulls energy prices lower and reduces inflation fears.
Risk management is paramount. With position sizing critical during high-volatility events, traders should consider reducing leverage into the FOMC Minutes and PMI releases, and ensure stop-loss orders account for potential whipsaw moves.
The Bottom Line
The week of May 19-23, 2026 opens quietly but builds toward concentrated volatility midweek. The April FOMC Minutes will reveal the internal Fed debate at a critical juncture, while the global PMI blitz will provide the first hard read on how economies are coping with elevated energy costs and tighter financial conditions.
For forex traders, the key question remains: can the dollar extend its rally above 99, or will stretched positioning and dovish Fed signals trigger a corrective pullback? The answer lies in Wednesday and Thursday's data—and whatever headlines emerge from the Middle East.
Stay nimble, watch your risk-reward ratios, and prepare for a back-loaded week of market-moving events.

Jesus Guzman
Founder & Lead Analyst
Jesus is the founder of FN Pulse and a veteran trader with over 15 years of experience in financial markets. He specializes in quantitative analysis and is passionate about bringing transparency and data-driven insights to the retail trading industry.