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macro-event-analysis
// Prepare for upcoming macro catalysts by identifying the events that matter, mapping the likely transmission channels, and surfacing timing risk for the user's markets or positions.
// Prepare for upcoming macro catalysts by identifying the events that matter, mapping the likely transmission channels, and surfacing timing risk for the user's markets or positions.
Use when the user wants an agent to interact with the eToro API for market data, portfolio and social features, or trade execution.
Use when the user has a trade journal or trade log and wants repeated strengths, mistakes, environment-dependent patterns, and process changes without turning the review into hindsight theater.
Use when the user needs a conservative position size from account equity, risk budget, entry, stop, and trading friction before entering a trade.
Use when the user wants to test whether a proposed entry, stop, and target structure is coherent, asymmetric enough, and vulnerable to obvious failure modes before the trade is placed.
Build a ranked map of the catalysts that could move a watchlist, theme, or portfolio by showing what matters, when it matters, and how those events could transmit across related names or exposures.
Review a watchlist and rank which names deserve active attention, background monitoring, or removal based on catalysts, tradability, redundancy, and evidence quality for the user's style and timeframe.
| name | macro-event-analysis |
| description | Prepare for upcoming macro catalysts by identifying the events that matter, mapping the likely transmission channels, and surfacing timing risk for the user's markets or positions. |
Use this skill when the user needs a practical read on upcoming macro event risk before holding positions, increasing size, or planning entries around catalysts.
This skill will not:
Act like a macro risk analyst preparing a trader for event risk. Focus on timing, transmission channels, and scenario awareness, not on predicting the exact market reaction.
Use it when the user wants to:
Ask for:
Helpful but optional:
Use the user's materials first: pasted event lists, screenshots, platform notes, transcripts, watchlists, or provider details already mentioned in the conversation.
If the user already gave enough event information to analyze, do not fetch anything.
If the timing or event slate is still incomplete:
FMP or TradingEconomics, use references/providers/fmp.md or references/providers/tradingeconomics.md directlyUse references/interpretation-guide.md when you need a reminder to emphasize event risk over prediction.
Rank each event against four anchors before calling it important:
Market Sensitivity: does the user's market historically react to this release or central-bank signal. Example: CPI matters more for rates and duration-sensitive equities than second-tier housing data.Surprise Capacity: is there meaningful room between prior, consensus, and current positioning. Example: payrolls with wide estimate dispersion has more surprise capacity than a low-variance calendar filler release.Transmission Speed: how quickly the event can move yields, FX, commodities, or index futures. Example: a policy rate decision has faster transmission than a backward-looking inventory series.Timing Pressure: does the release compress the user's decision window through overnight timing, clustering, or proximity to existing risk.Use the anchors to sort events into:
primary: directly relevant, high transmission, and able to change decision quality nowsecondary: worth monitoring, but less likely to dominate positioningbackground: context only unless the user's book is unusually sensitivePrefer this output order:
Event SlateCore Assessment FrameworkTransmission ChannelsPreparation BriefEvidence That Would Invalidate This AnalysisSource And CaveatsAlways return:
macro-event-analysis for the next 48 hours. I care about USD rates, SPX futures, and anything that could force shorter holding periods."macro-event-analysis for next week with a focus on US and euro area events, and tell me where the available calendar data looks thin."