On Monday the 10th, there is market-moving news out of Asia at 01:30, when China announces its Consumer Price Index for October. The benchmark was previously at the level of 1.6 percent on an annual basis. China’s inflation rate has been below five percent since 2010, from record highs in 1995, when it reached almost 30 percent. China also releases its latest Producer Price Index for October, previously reported at minus 1.8 percent.

Tuesday the 11th brings traders some potential movement on Aussie dollar crosses, amid public holidays in the EU and US. Australia releases its third-quarter House Price Index at half-past midnight. The benchmark was previously reported at the level of 10.1 percent on an annual basis.

Moving onto Wednesday the 12th, the spotlight is on Cable crosses, which could see some movement when the Bank of England releases its Quarterly Inflation Report at 10:30. The central bank’s inflation expectations are an important indicator on economic health in the UK, so analysts are watching closely for signals, either bullish or bearish.

The trading highlights on Thursday the 13th start at 09:00, when markets will be watching the European Central Bank’s Monthly Report for monetary policy signals affecting the Euro. Then, at 13:30, the US releases Initial Jobless Claims for the week of November 7th.

Friday the 14th is the busiest trading day of the week, with market-moving events starting in Europe at 07:00 with Germany’s third-quarter GDP results, and possible knock-on effects on the Euro-dollar. At 10:00 am, the Eurozone announces its Consumer Price Index for October, previously reported at 0.4 percent on a monthly basis, and expected to come in at the level of 0 percent. At the same time, the Eurozone releases third-quarter GDP figures, expected to come in at 0.7 percent on an annual basis. Markets are asking the question – can the Eurozone break slow growth, or will the bearish economy persist? Finally, at 13:30, the US releases Retail Sales figures for October, expected to come in at 0.2 percent on a monthly basis – from the previously-reported level of minus 0.3 percent.

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