Learn Economic Calendar as a calm daily desk routine.
An Economic Calendar course that teaches scheduled macro events as a calm risk routine: choose the desk window, filter before reading, separate events from holidays, read actual/forecast/previous carefully, and use alerts and reaction history as review context.
Learning path
Follow the same order as the desk.
Each lesson is crawlable article text plus an interactive artifact and Remotion-ready reinforcement concept.
What the learner should be able to do
Read the calendar as a risk clock rather than a trade signal.
Build a morning Gold/Silver event queue with date, timezone, country, category, importance, and asset context.
Separate scheduled data releases from exchange holidays and abnormal liquidity windows.
Read actual, forecast, previous, unit, reference period, and revisions without overreacting.
Use coverage, comparable cases, low-sample flags, reaction windows, and alerts as evidence and review context.
Desk routine
The repeated habit is the product.
- 1Write the event-risk question.
- 2Choose today, tomorrow, this week, or a custom range.
- 3Choose the Gold or Silver lens.
- 4Filter countries, categories, and importance before reading the table.
- 5Read the Daily Brief before drilling into event detail.
- 6Check holidays and session context before interpreting quiet price action.
- 7Write source, timing, expectation, actual print, revision, caveat, and next-tool handoff.
Source pack
Economic Release Calendar
CME Group
Used to frame scheduled economic releases as time-sensitive market events that traders prepare around.
Schedule of Releases for the Consumer Price Index
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Used as an official source example for release date, release time, reference month, and calendar verification.
FOMC Meeting Calendars and Information
Federal Reserve
Used as an official central-bank schedule example for meetings, statements, minutes, and projection materials.
Trading Holidays
local market
Used to keep event timing tied to exchange session and holiday context for global markets-facing commodity desks.
Commodity Trading Systems Sold on the Internet
CFTC
Used as a guardrail against turning event timing, charts, or release queues into trade-system claims.
Schedule of Releases for the Employment Situation
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Used as a known labor-market event family for search and category examples.
Release Schedule
U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis
Used to show that growth, income, spending, and revision-heavy release families should be filtered by macro channel.
Holiday and Trading Hours
CME Group
Used for exchange trading-hour and holiday context around Globex/COMEX/NYMEX session states.
Weekly Petroleum Status Report Schedule
U.S. Energy Information Administration
Used as an example of source-controlled release timing that can shift around holiday schedules.