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Market News & Insights
The July macro calendar traders cannot ignore
The Editorial Desk
2/7/2026
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The US economy enters July navigating a transitional macro landscape under a revised Federal Reserve policy framework. Market participant attention remains focused on persistent inflation, trade tariff uncertainty under Section 122 provisions and structural adjustments introduced by new leadership at the central bank.

Macro context

The Federal Reserve maintains its target range for the federal funds rate at 3.50% to 3.75%. Following the June meeting, new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh modified central bank communications by removing traditional forward guidance in favour of pure data dependence.

Inflation remains a key focus. The all items Consumer Price Index (CPI) increased 4.2% over the year to May 2026, marking the largest 12-month increase since April 2023. Brent crude has since retreated to the low US$70s per barrel as at 1 July 2026, after recent easing in Strait of Hormuz shipping disruptions.

Geopolitical risk remains a potential source of renewed volatility, but the current oil price backdrop does not support describing Brent as above US$100. Market participants enter July assessing whether softer economic data could justify interest rate reductions later in the year, or whether sticky services inflation and tariff-related cost pressures may require a restrictive stance for longer.

Fed funds rate

3.50% to 3.75%

Current operational baseline

Next FOMC

28 to 29 July 2026

Policy decision window

Brent crude

Low US$70s / bbl

As at 1 July 2026

Key data events count

5 major releases

High importance indicators

Growth, business activity and demand

Economic activity indicators continue to show a divergent picture across sectors. Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annualised rate of 2.1% in the first quarter of 2026, according to the third estimate from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis.

While the headline figure points to continued expansion, secondary market indicators continue to suggest pressure on corporate margins. Increased overheads from trade tariffs and structural transport bottlenecks may be affecting forward-looking factory order books as corporate expansion cools.

July growth data to watch
01
Jul
ISM Manufacturing PMI (June)
10:00 am ET | 12:00 am AEST (2 Jul)
High
06
Jul
ISM Services PMI (June)
10:00 am ET | 12:00 am AEST (7 Jul)
Medium
27
Jul
Advance Durable Goods Orders (June)
8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST
Medium
30
Jul
Advance GDP estimate (Q2 2026)
8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST
High
What markets may look for
  • The June manufacturing PMI, which printed at 53.3%, down from 54.0% in May.
  • Service sector business activity prints as an indicator of broader private consumption stability.
  • Capital goods orders excluding defence and aircraft, which may help measure underlying corporate capital investment.
  • Changes in corporate inventory accumulation patterns amid evolving global supply chain conditions.
  • The Q2 advance GDP estimate, released on the same day as the June PCE data.
Market sensitivities

Firm or accelerating activity data may drive US Treasury yields and the US dollar higher, which could weigh on equities through valuation compression. Conversely, softer growth prints may reduce interest rate expectations and weaken the US dollar, potentially supporting major equity indices.

Labour, payrolls and employment data

The domestic employment sector remains balanced within a low-hire, low-fire structural state. Higher net financing expenses are gradually cooling corporate recruitment pipelines, keeping payroll expansions within a contained band.

July labour data to watch
02
Jul
Employment Situation and non-farm payrolls (NFP) (June)
8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST
High
30
Jun
Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) (May)
10:00 am ET | 12:00 am AEST (1 Jul) · Recently released
Medium
Wkly
Jul
Unemployment Insurance Weekly Claims
Tracking parameters structural channel across July sessions
Medium
What markets may look for
  • Headline NFP net additions tracking near the 100,000 to 150,000 range, which may confirm moderated growth.
  • The unemployment rate remaining steady within its established 4.3% to 4.5% structural channel.
  • Revisions to prior months’ aggregate statistics, which may change perceived employment momentum.
  • Average hourly earnings growth rates as a key indicator of domestic wage-push inflation risks.
Policy risk callout

Under the revised Warsh policy framework, the central bank has minimised its emphasis on employment-driven forward modelling. If employment indicators weaken significantly while CPI prints remain high, the central bank may prioritise price stability over labour market support. This could alter some traditional defensive trading assumptions.

Market sensitivities

A stronger-than-expected NFP result may drive Treasury yields and the US dollar higher, which could cap equity market valuation multiples as rate cut timing shifts outward. A weaker-than-expected employment print may reduce the US dollar, lower yields and support interest-rate-sensitive assets such as gold.

Inflation, CPI, PPI and PCE

Inflation trends remain a primary source of volatility across financial markets. Energy costs, secondary passthrough from recent tariffs and sticky core services pricing continue to test the central bank’s mandate.

July inflation data to watch
14
Jul
Consumer Price Index (CPI) (June)
8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST
High
15
Jul
Producer Price Index (PPI) (June)
8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST
Medium
30
Jul
Personal Income and Outlays and personal consumption expenditures (PCE) (June)
8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST
High
What markets may look for
  • The monthly PCE core deflator as a key metric for policy assessment.
  • Wholesale price changes within PPI to identify margin pressure on consumer goods.
  • Second-round inflation effects from elevated maritime freight and fuel costs on core services.
  • Measures of consumer inflation expectations to assess whether longer-term targets remain anchored.
Market sensitivities

Cooling inflation data may lower Treasury yields, weaken the US dollar and provide support to gold and stock indices. Sticky or accelerating monthly prints could reinforce higher-for-longer rate assumptions, lifting the US dollar while pressuring corporate debt markets.

Policy, trade and geopolitics

Trade policy frameworks continue to create uncertainty for corporate supply chains. The temporary 10% blanket tariff authorised under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 faces a scheduled expiry on 24 July.

The tariff outlook is also subject to legal uncertainty. On 7 May 2026, the US Court of International Trade ruled that the administration exceeded its authority in imposing the Section 122 surcharge. The ruling does not automatically remove tariff exposure for all importers while the matter proceeds through appeal, but it adds legal risk to the scheduled expiry or replacement point.

Market participants are assessing whether these short-term surcharges may end, be replaced or transition into another policy framework. Any change could materially affect corporate input cost models, supply chain planning and margin expectations.

Monitor this month
08
Jul
FOMC minutes for the 16 to 17 June meeting
2:00 pm ET | 4:00 am AEST (9 Jul)
Medium
15
Jul
Federal Reserve Beige Book
2:00 pm ET | 4:00 am AEST (16 Jul)
Medium
24
Jul
Section 122 temporary import surcharge
Scheduled expiry or replacement threshold parameters
High
29
Jul
FOMC statement & press conference
Statement: 2:00 pm ET | Press Conf: 2:30 pm ET
High

Key watchlist summary

01

Top data point

June CPI on 14 July at 8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST

02

Top risk event

Expiry, replacement or legal challenge pathway for Section 122 tariffs on 24 July

03

Wildcard

Geopolitical transit safety developments inside the Strait of Hormuz

04

Earnings watch

Mid-month financial sector Q2 corporate updates

05

Key threshold

The US 10-year Treasury yield testing or holding near 4.5%

06

Next FOMC

28 to 29 July 2026 interest rate decision

07

Double data day

Q2 advance GDP and June PCE on 30 July

Bottom Line

July refocuses the macroeconomic narrative on inflation metrics, trade policy risk and policy execution under a restructured Federal Reserve administration. The central bank remains focused on defending its price-stability mandate against complex external commodity and trade policy developments.

For market participants, direction may depend heavily on whether incoming data validates high interest rate settings or points to clearer signs of an economic slowdown.

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