What is Fundamental Analysis?
Fundamental analysis (FA) is the study of economic, political, and social factors that influence the supply and demand for a currency. While technical analysis asks "what is the price doing?", fundamental analysis asks "why is the price moving and where should it go based on underlying economic reality?"
FA is particularly valuable for:
- Understanding the big picture (macro trends lasting weeks or months)
- Trading around major news events
- Avoiding trades that work technically but contradict the macro backdrop
- Position trading over the long term
Most professional traders combine both fundamental and technical analysis — fundamentals for direction, technicals for timing.
Key Economic Indicators
Tier 1 (High Impact — Move Markets Significantly):
| Indicator | Frequency | What it Measures | Currency Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) | Monthly (1st Friday) | US job creation | Strong/weak USD |
| CPI (Inflation) | Monthly | Consumer price changes | Rate expectations |
| GDP | Quarterly | Economic growth | Currency strength |
| FOMC/ECB/BoE Decisions | 6–8x per year | Interest rate changes | Major moves |
| Retail Sales | Monthly | Consumer spending | GDP leading indicator |
Tier 2 (Medium Impact):
- PMI (Purchasing Managers' Index) — above 50 = expansion
- Trade Balance — trade deficits weaken a currency
- Consumer Confidence — gauge of economic sentiment
- Housing Starts/Building Permits
Central Banks
Central banks are the single most powerful force in the forex market. Their decisions on interest rates and monetary policy determine the long-term direction of currencies.
Major central banks and their currencies:
| Central Bank | Currency | Key Policy Tool |
|---|---|---|
| Federal Reserve (Fed) | USD | Federal Funds Rate |
| European Central Bank (ECB) | EUR | Main Refinancing Rate |
| Bank of England (BoE) | GBP | Bank Rate |
| Bank of Japan (BoJ) | JPY | Overnight Rate |
| Swiss National Bank (SNB) | CHF | Policy Rate |
| Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) | AUD | Cash Rate |
How central bank communication works:
- Hawkish language: Signals future rate hikes → currency strengthens
- Dovish language: Signals rate cuts or stimulus → currency weakens
- Neutral/wait-and-see: Little immediate impact
Even the expectation of a rate change moves markets significantly — sometimes more than the actual decision.
Interest Rates
Interest rates are the most important long-term driver of currency values. The mechanism:
- A country raises interest rates
- Foreign investors move capital there to earn higher returns
- Demand for that country's currency increases
- The currency appreciates
The Carry Trade: Traders borrow in low-interest currencies (JPY, CHF) and invest in high-interest currencies (AUD, NZD). This creates persistent trends.
Interest Rate Differentials:
- AUD/JPY: If Australia's rate is 4.25% and Japan's is -0.1%, the 4.35% differential drives demand for AUD over JPY
- When risk sentiment turns negative, carry trades unwind rapidly — causing sharp moves
NFP and Jobs Data
The Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) report, released on the first Friday of each month, is the single most anticipated economic release in the forex market. It measures job creation in the US economy (excluding the farming sector).
How to read NFP:
- Above forecast: USD strengthens (economy is strong → Fed may hike)
- Below forecast: USD weakens (economy slowing → Fed may cut)
- Revisions to previous months: Often move markets as much as the new reading
NFP trading tips:
- Expect spreads to widen significantly 30 minutes before release
- The initial spike is often not the real direction — wait for markets to settle
- The first 15–30 minutes are often chaotic and best avoided
- Better opportunity is often 30–60 minutes after the release when the true trend emerges
Fundamental analysis provides the context for understanding why currency pairs are trending in a particular direction. Combined with technical analysis for entry and exit timing, it forms a complete trading framework.