Weekly Economic Calendar: Week of March 23-28, 2026

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Weekly Economic Calendar: Week of March 23-28, 2026
Weekly Economic Calendar: Week of March 23- 28, 2026 (GMT+8)
This week’s macro calendar is driven by a concentrated mix of UK inflation, retail demand, and PMI data, alongside key U.S. business activity, energy, and labour releases. Market attention begins on Tuesday with a strong UK and U.S. PMI block, where traders will get an early March snapshot of whether services and manufacturing momentum is still holding up on both sides of the Atlantic. These releases can quickly influence short-term expectations for growth, risk sentiment, and currency direction, especially for GBP and USD pairs.

Mid-week, the focus shifts toward inflation and energy pricing as the UK CPI (YoY) and CPI (MoM) data provide an important signal for pound traders, while U.S. Crude Oil Inventories may influence inflation expectations through the energy channel. If UK inflation remains firm, markets may reduce expectations for a softer policy path, while any meaningful oil inventory surprise could affect broader pricing in commodities, yields, and the dollar.

The week then closes with a labour-and-consumption checkpoint, where U.S. Initial Jobless Claims offer another read on labour-market resilience before Friday’s UK retail sales cluster. Core Retail Sales and Retail Sales data will be important in showing whether British consumer demand is still holding up despite inflation pressure. 
 
Date
Time
Currency
Economic Events
Forecast
Previous
24/3/2026
17:30
GBP
Services PMI (Mar)
53.0
53.9
 
17:30
GBP
Composite PMI (Mar)
53.7
 
17:30
GBP
 Manufacturing PMI (Mar)
51.1
51.7
 
21:45
USD
Manufacturing PMI (Mar)
51.6
 
21:45
USD
Services PMI (Mar)
51.7
25/3/2026
15:00
GBP
 CPI (YoY) (Feb)
3.0%
3.0%
 
15:00
GBP
CPI (MoM) (Feb)
-0.5%
 
22:30
USD
Crude Oil Inventories
6.156M
26/3/2026
20:30
USD
Initial Jobless Claims
211K
205K
27/3/2026
15:00
GBP
Fed Retail Sales (MoM) (Feb)
-0.3%
1.8%
 

Key highlights:
🇬🇧 24 Mar, 17:30 – Services PMI (Mar)
🇬🇧 24 Mar, 17:30 – Composite PMI (Mar)
🇬🇧 24 Mar, 17:30 – Manufacturing PMI (Mar)
🇺🇸 24 Mar, 21:45 – Manufacturing PMI (Mar)
🇺🇸 24 Mar, 21:45 – Services PMI (Mar)
🇬🇧 25 Mar, 15:00 – CPI (YoY) (Feb)
🇬🇧 25 Mar, 15:00 – CPI (MoM) (Feb)
🇺🇸 25 Mar, 22:30 – Crude Oil Inventories
🇺🇸 26 Mar, 20:30 – Initial Jobless Claims
🇬🇧 27 Mar, 15:00 – Core Retail Sales (YoY) (Feb)
🇬🇧 27 Mar, 15:00 – Core Retail Sales (MoM) (Feb)
🇬🇧 27 Mar, 15:00 – Retail Sales (MoM) (Feb)
 
Macro Analysis:

🇬🇧 UK PMI Cluster on Tuesday

The UK Services PMI, Composite PMI, and Manufacturing PMI for March form the first major event block of the week for GBP. Since services remain a key driver of the UK economy, traders will watch whether business activity stays in expansion territory. Stronger-than-expected readings can support the pound by reinforcing growth confidence, while softer numbers may raise concerns that economic momentum is starting to cool.

🇺🇸 U.S. PMI Check on Tuesday Night

U.S. Manufacturing PMI and Services PMI will provide an early March read on business conditions in the U.S. economy. If both releases remain firm, the dollar may find support from the idea that growth is still resilient. If the PMI readings weaken, traders may begin to question whether momentum is slowing more than expected, which could soften USD sentiment.

🇬🇧 UK Inflation Signal on Wednesday

UK CPI (YoY) and CPI (MoM) for February are the week’s most important inflation releases for GBP. A firmer inflation print may reduce room for dovish expectations and help support the pound, while a softer result may encourage the market to think inflation pressure is easing and that policy expectations can become less restrictive.

🇺🇸 U.S. Energy and Inflation Link on Wednesday

Crude Oil Inventories matter because a large draw may support oil prices and keep inflation concerns elevated, while a large build may cool energy pricing and slightly reduce inflation pressure. Although this is not always a direct FX catalyst, it can still affect rate expectations and spill over into broader USD sentiment.

🇺🇸 U.S. Labour Check on Thursday

Initial Jobless Claims remain one of the clearest high-frequency signals for labour-market conditions in the U.S. If claims stay low, traders may see that as another sign the labour market remains firm, which can support the dollar. If claims rise meaningfully, it may suggest some cooling in employment conditions and reduce confidence in near-term USD strength.

🇬🇧 UK Consumer Demand Window on Friday

Core Retail Sales (YoY), Core Retail Sales (MoM), and Retail Sales (MoM) are key indicators for judging how well UK consumer demand is holding up. Stronger retail data can support GBP by reinforcing the idea that household spending remains resilient. Weak figures, however, may increase concern that consumers are under pressure and that domestic demand is losing momentum.

Speculative Outlook for GBP and USD Traders:

This is a data-heavy week where GBP is likely to be the most event-sensitive currency, led by Tuesday’s PMI releases, Wednesday’s CPI data, and Friday’s retail sales cluster. USD traders should focus on Tuesday night’s U.S. PMI block, Wednesday’s crude inventory release, and Thursday’s Initial Jobless Claims for confirmation on whether the U.S. economy is still showing resilience. The main market theme is whether business activity, inflation, and consumer demand continue to support the current macro narrative, or whether fresh signs of cooling begin to shift expectations.

🟢 Bullish GBP Scenario – Stronger Pound Case

UK Services PMI and Composite PMI improve, showing stronger business momentum.
Manufacturing PMI holds steady or surprises to the upside.
UK CPI comes in firmer than expected, reducing room for softer policy expectations.
Retail sales data beats expectations, showing consumers are still spending.
At the same time, U.S. PMI data or Jobless Claims come in softer, reducing relative support for USD.

🔴 Bearish GBP Scenario – Weaker Pound Case

UK PMI readings weaken, suggesting softer economic activity.
UK CPI comes in below expectations, encouraging a more dovish interpretation.
Retail sales miss forecasts, raising concern over consumer weakness.
Meanwhile, U.S. PMIs remain firm and Jobless Claims stay low, strengthening the relative case for USD over GBP.

🟡 Wild Cards – High Whipsaw Risk

A mixed UK data set, such as soft PMI but firm CPI, could create conflicting GBP reactions.
Strong U.S. PMIs combined with higher Jobless Claims may create a choppy or unclear USD direction.
A large crude inventory surprise could move oil sharply and distort inflation expectations.
If UK inflation stays firm but retail sales weaken, markets may struggle to decide whether GBP should trade on inflation resilience or growth concern.

 

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