USD-base reference rates, 7- and 30-day trends, and top movers—for situational awareness and research.NationFiles NFSI Geopolitical Risk Analysis NationFiles Analytics · connector-fed data refreshed throughout the day Markets & currenciesUSD-base reference rates, 7- and 30-day trends, and top movers—for situational awareness and research. NationFiles Markets: USD reference rates (ECB/Frankfurt series as on the page), Fed H.10 where imported, 7- and 30-day trends and movers from DataSourceConnector tables. NFSI/MLMV context is for orientation across modules; not investment advice. See on-page “as of” stamps. Publisher: Neawolf Media Group. What this market page measures — and how it relates to geopolitical contextOn this dashboard the Naciro engine relates global live reference FX rates to geopolitical stability signals across the NationFiles stack: USD-quoted daily imports (including the Frankfurt/ECB series via DataSourceConnector) fold into cross rates against a selectable base; tables show foreign-currency units per base unit—a higher reading in the window means relative weakness (price description, not advice). Fed H.10 via FRED may appear when imported. Movers summarize the largest seven-day shifts in those reference curves and are not tick-level intraday data. The optional context chart can overlay the NationFiles Stability Index (NFSI) for a reference country plus MLMV daily counts to read FX alongside structural and conflict-related context without asserting automated causality. Cryptocurrencies are not priced here as a separate NationFiles connector asset class. Details: /legal/sources/. Not investment advice. Global market correlations and NFSI contextFurther down the page you will see movers tables, then calculators and line charts for reference FX (including the ECB/Frankfurt daily path) against a selectable base. The “Context: currency · NFSI · conflict events” section can overlay the same days with the NationFiles Stability Index (NFSI) for a reference country and daily MLMV counts so currency moves sit next to geopolitical context—without claiming an automated causal link. Cryptocurrencies are not offered here as a separate NationFiles connector price grid. Connectors and methodology: /legal/sources/. Not investment advice. What do the largest seven-day currency moves on this market page represent, and how should you read them?The two lists rank the biggest week-on-week changes in cross rates against your selected base currency from the curated ECB/Frankfurt series, using the same units-per-base convention as the FX table. A positive entry in the “weaker” list means more foreign-currency units are needed per base unit inside the window — the foreign currency weakened relative to the base, not a trading recommendation. Movers are not tick-level intraday data and are distinct from NFSI or MLMV context panels; source notes appear at the bottom of the page.
Currency converterConversion via USD-quoted reference rates. The chart shows the cross rate (units of “To” per 1 “From”) over time. Result — — Cross rate Change vs period start Lines are 0 % on the first day of the window. Positive = more units per 1 USD than at the start (weaker vs USD). USD hidden as the quote base. Only currencies with a full series in the selected window. Methodology: NFSI & refresh The NationFiles Stability Index (NFSI) combines structural and event signals by country, normalised and weighted from multiple NationFiles sources. Raw signals are processed in the backend several times per hour; NFSI values in the context chart are daily or window aggregates from that pipeline — not every raw item in real time. The context chart is for orientation alongside FX and MLMV event counts. It does not prove causality between series. Not investment advice. Context: currency · NFSI · conflict eventsMLMV world map →Timeline: FX vs your base, country NFSI, and global MLMV daily counts. For orientation — not proof of causation.
World map: FX vs. baseCountries coloured by primary currency. Same convention as the FX table: values are “units of the country’s currency per 1 unit of your selected base”. If that rate rises (a positive Δ, +), you need more of the country’s currency per 1 base — it has weakened versus the base (map: red). If it falls (negative Δ, −), the currency has strengthened (map: green). Navy: little change, or the country uses the base currency. Grey: no rate series or no currency mapping. Red when Δ is positive (+) = country’s currency weaker vs. selected base · Green when Δ is negative (−) = stronger · Navy = flat or country uses base · Grey = no data Δ 1 day Δ 7 days Exchange rates & trendsFrankfurter/ECB series in two compact columns. “Live” = latest daily import. Δ 1 day = last vs previous row. Positive 7-day change = more units per USD = weaker currency.
Data sources (DataSourceConnector)
Not investment advice. Rates may differ by provider; verify timestamps and trading conditions. |