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Events Calendar

The Events Calendar on Tradomate helps traders track upcoming and past market-moving events while understanding how prices have historically behaved around similar situations.

Instead of functioning as just a list of dates and announcements, the calendar is designed to add context to events by combining:

  • Corporate events
  • Macroeconomic events
  • Historical price behavior
  • Market context
  • Event importance
  • Expectations vs outcomes

The goal is to help traders prepare for volatility, understand why markets react, and make better-informed decisions around important events.

Whether you trade stocks, indices, or options, the calendar helps you identify periods where volatility, momentum, or uncertainty may increase.


Markets often move sharply around:

  • Earnings announcements
  • Dividends and corporate actions
  • Inflation releases
  • Interest rate decisions
  • GDP data
  • Employment reports
  • Global macroeconomic announcements

But most event calendars only tell you what is happening.

Tradomate’s Events Calendar focuses on:

  • Why the event matters
  • How markets reacted historically
  • What kind of volatility is common around the event
  • Whether similar events previously led to bullish, bearish, or neutral reactions

This helps traders move from reactive decision-making to preparation and contextual analysis.


The calendar is divided into two primary event categories:

Company-specific events such as:

  • Quarterly Results
  • Dividends
  • Book Closures
  • Bonus Issues
  • Stock Splits
  • Buybacks
  • Corporate Actions

These events focus on stock-level behavior and company-specific developments.

Historical behavior for stock events is calculated using the stock’s own historical price action.

Example: If you open an earnings event for Nykaa, the historical behavior shown is based on Nykaa’s past earnings reactions.

Broader economic events that may impact the overall market.

Examples include:

  • Inflation data (CPI/WPI)
  • GDP releases
  • RBI policy decisions
  • US Fed events
  • Employment data
  • Interest rate announcements
  • Industrial production
  • PMI data
  • Retail sales
  • Global macro triggers

Historical behavior for macroeconomic events is shown using Nifty 50 price behavior.

This helps traders understand how the broader market has historically reacted to similar economic releases.


The Events Calendar supports two viewing modes.

The Calendar View provides a monthly grid layout of events.

Each date shows:

  • Upcoming or past events
  • Event tags
  • Company names
  • Event types
  • Market context

This view is useful for:

  • Planning ahead
  • Identifying event-heavy weeks
  • Spotting volatility clusters
  • Tracking earnings seasons
  • Preparing for major macro announcements

Dates are color-coded based on market behavior.

  • Green background → Nifty 50 closed higher that day
  • Red background → Nifty 50 closed lower that day
  • Grey → Neutral/non-trading dates/previous-month placeholders
  • Yellow highlight → Market holidays

This helps traders immediately understand the broader market environment in which events occurred.

Examples:

  • A strong earnings result during a weak market environment
  • A macro event during a high-volatility session
  • Event-heavy bullish or bearish market phases

The Timeline View displays events in a vertically structured chronological format.

Each event appears as an expandable row containing:

  • Event name
  • Company/event information
  • Event type
  • Event date
  • Expand button

This view is designed for:

  • Sequential event tracking
  • Faster scanning
  • Event-by-event analysis
  • Historical behavior review

When expanded, the event opens into a detailed historical behavior section directly inside the timeline.


The calendar includes multiple filters to help traders focus only on relevant events.

At the top-right of the page, users can switch between:

  • Stock Events
  • Macroeconomic Events

This separates company-specific events from broader market-moving economic releases.

The search bar allows users to quickly search for:

  • Company names
  • Stock tickers
  • Event names

Examples:

  • RELIANCE
  • TCS
  • Dividend
  • Results
  • Event names
  • Economic indicators
  • Countries

Examples:

  • CPI
  • Inflation
  • GDP
  • Fed
  • India
  • US

This makes navigating large event calendars significantly faster.

Stock events can be filtered using:

  • Stock universe
  • Sector filters
  • Event types

Examples:

  • F&O Stocks
  • Banking sector
  • Dividend events only
  • Results only

By default, the calendar focuses on F&O stocks to prioritize actively traded names.

Macro events support:

  • Country filters
  • Impact filters

Countries currently include:

  • India
  • United States

Impact levels include:

  • High
  • Medium
  • Low

This allows traders to focus only on events relevant to their market or strategy.

Macroeconomic events are tagged using importance indicators.

Major events likely to influence broader market direction or volatility. Examples:

  • RBI policy
  • Fed rate decisions
  • CPI inflation

Events that may influence sectors, flows, or short-term sentiment. Examples:

  • Industrial production
  • PMI data

Lower-priority events with historically smaller market influence.

These tags help traders quickly identify potentially volatile sessions.


Each event card contains contextual information depending on the event type.

Stock events may display:

  • Company name
  • Event type
  • Corporate action details
  • Results announcements
  • Dividend information
  • Book closure information

Examples:

  • “Results for Q4 FY2026”
  • “Dividend of Rs. 7”
  • “Book Closure”

Macro event cards may display:

  • Event name
  • Country
  • Impact level
  • Previous value
  • Forecast (estimate)
  • Actual value

Examples:

  • WPI Inflation YoY
  • GDP Growth Rate YoY
  • Initial Jobless Claims

If multiple events exist on the same date, the calendar displays a:

“View all events” option.

Clicking this opens a side modal containing all events for that day.

This helps keep the calendar visually clean while still allowing access to detailed event lists.

Inside this modal, users can:

  • Search events
  • Scan all company events for the day
  • Open individual event analysis
  • Navigate quickly between events

This is especially useful during:

  • Earnings-heavy weeks
  • Dividend-heavy periods
  • Major macroeconomic sessions

Clicking any event opens a detailed side panel containing historical behavior and contextual analysis.

This is the core analytical layer of the Events Calendar.

The panel includes:

  • Historical price behavior
  • Average returns
  • Min/max reactions
  • Event metadata
  • Forecast vs actual values
  • Country/impact information
  • Navigation controls

Users can move between:

  • Previous event
  • Next event

within the same day directly from the panel.


One of the most important features of the Events Calendar is the historical behavior analysis.

Instead of only showing the event itself, Tradomate also shows how prices behaved around similar historical occurrences.

This helps traders understand:

  • Typical volatility
  • Directional tendencies
  • Historical follow-through
  • Risk around events

The goal is not prediction, but pattern recognition and preparation.

Historical behavior is shown across three key periods:

Price movement on the same day as the event.

Price movement on the next trading day.

Short-term follow-through after the event.

These timeframes help traders evaluate:

  • Immediate reactions
  • Delayed reactions
  • Continuation behavior

For each timeframe, the calendar displays:

  • Average return
  • Minimum return
  • Maximum return

This helps traders understand:

  • Typical outcomes
  • Best-case scenarios
  • Worst-case scenarios
  • Event volatility ranges

Example: An earnings event may historically produce:

  • Mild average returns
  • But extremely large min/max swings

This indicates elevated volatility even if average direction is neutral.

Historical behavior is calculated dynamically using similar past occurrences of the event.

Examples:

  • Past quarterly results
  • Previous GDP releases
  • Historical inflation reports
  • Earlier dividend announcements

The number of historical occurrences varies depending on available data.

Examples:

  • “Based on last 6 Results”
  • “Based on last 77 WPI Inflation YoY reports”

This keeps the analysis adaptive instead of using fixed sample sizes and this way, we keep adding onto the data as well.


The historical behavior shown depends on the event category.

Behavior is calculated using the specific stock’s historical price action.

Example: Nykaa earnings → Nykaa historical returns

Behavior is calculated using Nifty 50 historical price action.

Example: Inflation data → Nifty 50 historical reactions

This separation helps traders distinguish between:

  • Stock-specific volatility
  • Broader market reactions

Previous, Estimate & Actual (Macro Events)

Section titled “Previous, Estimate & Actual (Macro Events)”

Macroeconomic events include:

  • Previous - The value reported during the last release.
  • Estimate - What the market expects for the current release.
  • Actual - The value officially reported.

Markets often react more strongly to:

  • deviations from expectations
  • than to the number itself.

For example:

  • Inflation rising may still be bullish if it comes below estimates
  • Strong GDP growth may disappoint if expectations were even higher

This helps traders understand how expectations influence market behavior.


In Timeline View, clicking “Expand” opens an accordion containing:

  • Historical price behavior
  • Additional event information
  • Contextual analysis

This allows traders to inspect events directly within the timeline without leaving the page.

The accordion includes:

  • Event returns
  • Average/min/max values
  • Event metadata
  • Country and impact tags
  • Forecast and actual values

Market holidays are also displayed directly on the calendar.

Examples:

  • Maharashtra Day
  • Bakri Id

This helps traders:

  • Identify non-trading sessions
  • Understand liquidity gaps
  • Plan around shortened or disrupted trading weeks

The Events Calendar can be used in multiple ways depending on trading style.

  • Avoid trading blindly into high-impact events
  • Prepare for volatility spikes
  • Reduce exposure during uncertain sessions
  • Track macro event timing
  • Plan entries around earnings
  • Understand post-event continuation behavior
  • Avoid holding into historically volatile events
  • Track dividend and corporate action schedules
  • Prepare for implied volatility expansion
  • Track event-heavy weeks
  • Understand historical movement ranges
  • Anticipate volatility compression after events
  • Track macroeconomic shifts
  • Monitor broader market sentiment
  • Understand index-level event sensitivity
  • Prepare around central bank events and inflation releases

The Events Calendar is:

  • Not a prediction engine
  • Not a trading signal tool
  • Not a news feed

It is a contextual event-analysis system designed to help traders:

  • prepare better
  • understand market behavior
  • evaluate historical reactions
  • improve event awareness

Instead of reacting to events after markets move, the Events Calendar helps traders prepare in advance using historical context and event-driven analysis.

It helps answer questions like:

  • How volatile is this event usually?
  • Does the market typically react strongly?
  • How have similar earnings behaved historically?
  • Is this event worth trading or avoiding?
  • Is this stock-specific or market-wide behavior?

By combining event tracking with historical market behavior, Tradomate transforms the calendar from a simple informational tool into a preparation and contextual analysis framework for traders.