Company fundamentals explain a single stock; macro data explains the tide that lifts or sinks all of them. A handful of scheduled releases — growth, inflation, interest rates, jobs — shape how much investors will pay for every future dollar of earnings. You don't have to forecast them, but you should know what they are and when they land, because they create some of the largest, fastest moves in markets.
GDP — the size of the economy
Gross domestic product measures total output. Reported quarterly by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, it's the broadest gauge of whether the economy is expanding or contracting. Markets care most about the change and how it compares to expectations.
Inflation — CPI
The Consumer Price Index (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics) tracks the change in prices paid by consumers. Hot inflation pressures the Fed to keep rates high; cooling inflation gives it room to cut. One of the most market-moving monthly releases.
Interest rates & the Fed
The Federal Reserve sets the federal funds rate to pursue stable prices and maximum employment. Rates are the price of money: they ripple into mortgages, corporate borrowing, and — crucially — how much investors will pay for future earnings.
The jobs report
Monthly nonfarm payrolls and the unemployment rate (BLS) show the labor market's health. Strong jobs can mean a strong economy — but also inflation pressure and a less dovish Fed, so "good news" can read as "bad news" for stocks.
Leading vs. lagging indicators
Some data points lead the economy (new orders, building permits, yield curve); others lag it (unemployment, GDP revisions). Leading indicators are where forward-looking markets pay the most attention.
The release calendar is the point
These are scheduled: the Fed meeting (FOMC), CPI, the jobs report, GDP. Knowing the calendar lets you anticipate volatility and decide in advance how — or whether — you'll trade around it.
Risk-on, risk-off
Macro doesn't just move prices up or down — it shifts investors' appetite for risk. "Risk-on" days (easing inflation, dovish Fed) favor growth stocks and speculative assets; "risk-off" days (shocks, hawkish surprises) send money to cash, bonds, and defensive sectors. Recognizing the regime matters more than predicting any single number — which connects directly to sectors and the business cycle.
See also
- FUNDAMENTALSFundamentals hub · Sectors & the Business Cycle · Earnings & Catalysts
- DATA (free)BEA — GDP · BLS — CPI · Federal Reserve — Monetary Policy
- TRADERSRay Dalio (the macro machine)
- COURSEMasterclass — Phase 6: The Modern Market