Forex Basics
Foreign Exchange
Foreign exchange (Forex or FX) is the largest financial market in the world with a daily turnover of over $2.0 trillion.
What is traded on the Foreign Exchange?
The answer is money. Forex trading is the simultaneous buying of one
currency and selling of another. Currencies are traded through a broker
or dealer and are traded in pairs; for example the Euro dollar and the
US dollar (EUR/USD) or the British pound and the Japanese Yen (GBP/JPY).
This kind of trading is often very confusing to people
because they are not buying anything physical. Think of buying a
currency as buying a share in a particular country. When you buy, say,
Japanese Yen, you are in effect buying a share in the Japanese economy,
as the price of the currency is a direct reflection of what the market
thinks about the current and future health of the country's economy.
Unlike other financial markets, the foreign exchange
market has no physical location and no central exchange. The Forex
market operates 24 hours a day through an electronic network of banks,
corporations and individual traders. Forex trading begins every day in
Sydney, then moves to Tokyo, followed by London and then New York. The
major market makers, or dealers, consist of the commercial and
investment banks, the exchange traded futures, and registered futures
commission merchants. Our dealing desk is open 24-hours a day from
Sunday 17:00 EST to Friday 17:00 EST.
Foreign Exchange Prices
Foreign exchange markets and prices are mainly influenced by
international trade flows and investment flows. The FX markets are also
influenced, but to a lesser extent, by the same factors that influence
the equity and bond markets: economic and political conditions
especially interest rates, inflation, and political instability. Those
factors usually have only a short-term impact, which makes Forex
attractive as it offers some of the diversification necessary to
protect against adverse movements in the equity and bond markets.
Currencies are usually quoted to four decimal places,
such as the Euro/US Dollar trading at 1.5821/1.5823, with the last
decimal place referred to as a point or "pip". A pip for most
currencies is 0.0001 of an exchange rate; the one exception is the
USD/JPY quote in which each pip is equal to 0.01.
How an FX Trade Works?
In this market you may buy or sell currencies. The objective is to earn
a profit from your position. Placing a trade in the foreign exchange
market is simple: the mechanics of a trade are virtually identical to
those found in other markets, so the transition for many traders is
often seamless.
Example of How FX Trade Works
| Trader's Action |
Euros |
US Dollars |
| A trader purchases 10,000 euros in the beginning of June when the EUR/USD rate was 1.5540. |
10,000 |
-15,540 |
| In the end of July the trader exchanges his 10,000 euro back into US dollar at the market rate of 1.6010. |
-10,000 |
16,010 |
| In this example, the trader earned a gross profit of $470. |
0 |
470 |
Quoting Conventions
Currencies are quoted in pairs, such as EUR/USD or USD/JPY. The first
listed currency is known as the base currency, while the second is
called the counter or quote currency. The base currency is the "basis"
for the buy or the sell. For example, if you BUY EUR/USD you have
bought euros (simultaneously sold dollars). You would do so in
expectation that the euro will appreciate (go up) relative to the US
dollar.
EUR/USD
In this example euro is the base currency and thus the "basis" for the buy/sell.
If you believe that the US economy will continue to weaken and this
will hurt the US dollar, you would execute a BUY EUR/USD order. By
doing so you have bought euros in the expectation that they will
appreciate versus the US dollar. If you believe that the US economy is
strong and the euro will weaken against the US dollar you would execute
a SELL EUR/USD order. By doing so you have sold euros in the
expectation that they will depreciate versus the US dollar.
USD/JPY
In this example the US dollar is the base currency and thus the "basis" for the buy/sell.
If you think that the Japanese government is going to weaken the yen in
order to help its export industry, you would execute a BUY USD/JPY
order. By doing so you have bought U.S dollars in the expectation that
they will appreciate versus the Japanese yen. If you believe that
Japanese investors are pulling money out of U.S. financial markets and
repatriating funds back to Japan, and this will hurt the US dollar, you
would execute a SELL USD/JPY order. By doing so you have sold U.S
dollars in the expectation that they will depreciate against the
Japanese yen.
GBP/USD
In this example the GBP is the base currency and thus the "basis" for the buy/sell.
If you think the British economy will continue to be the leading
economy among the G7 nations in terms of growth, thus buying the pound,
you would execute a BUY GBP/USD order. By doing so you have bought
pounds in the expectation that they will appreciate versus the US
dollar. If you believe the British are going to adopt the euro and this
will weaken pounds as they devalue their currency in anticipation of
the merge, you would execute a SELL GBP/USD order. By doing so you have
sold pounds in the expectation that they will depreciate against the US
dollar.
USD/CHF
In this example the USD is the base currency and thus the "basis" for the buy/sell.
If you think the US dollar is undervalued, you would execute a BUY
USD/CHF order. By doing so you have bought US dollars in the
expectation that they will appreciate versus the Swiss Franc. If you
believe that due to instability in the Middle East and in U.S.
financial markets the dollar will continue to weaken, you would execute
a SELL USD/CHF order. By doing so you have sold US dollars in the
expectation that they will depreciate against the Swiss franc.
Buying/Selling
First, you should determine whether you want to buy or sell.
If you want to buy (which actually means buy the base currency and sell
the quote currency), you want the base currency to rise in value and
then you would sell it back at a higher price. In trader's talk, this
is called "going long" or taking a "long position". Just remember: Long
= Buy = Ask.
If you want to sell (which actually means sell the base currency and
buy the quote currency), you want the base currency to fall in value
and then you would buy it back at a lower price. This is called "going
short" or taking a "short position". Short = Sell = Bid.
» How to calculate Profit and Loss
Bid/Ask Spread
All Forex quotes include a two-way price, the bid and ask. The bid is always lower than the ask price.
The bid is the price in which the dealer is willing to buy the base
currency in exchange for the quote currency. This means the bid is the
price in which you the trader will sell.
The ask is the price at which the dealer will sell the base currency in
exchange for the quote currency. This means the ask is the price in
which you the trader will buy.
The difference between the bid and the ask price is popularly know as the Spread.
Let's take a look at an example taken from a trading software:
On this EUR/USD quote, the bid price is 1.2293 and the ask price is
1.2296. Look at how this broker makes it so easy for you to trade away
your money. If you want to sell EUR, you click "Sell" and you will sell
Euros at 1.2293. If you want to buy EUR, you click "Buy" and you will
buy Euros at 1.2296.
I don't have enough money to buy $10,000 EUR. Can I still trade?
Yes, You can with margin trading!
Margin trading is simply the term used for trading with borrowed
capital. This is how you're able to open $10,000 or $100,000 positions
with $50 or $1,000. You can conduct relatively large transactions, very
quickly and cheaply, with a small amount of initial capital.
For Example:
You believe that signals in the market are indicating that the British
Pound will go up against the US Dollar. You open 1 lot ($100,000) for
buying the Pound with a 1% margin at the price of 1.5000 and wait for
the exchange rate to climb. This means you now control $100,000 worth
of British Pound with $1,000. Your predictions come true and you decide
to sell. You close the position at 1.5050. You earn 50 pips or about
$500. (A pip is the smallest price movement available in a currency).
So for an initial capital investment of $1,000, you have made 50%
return. Return equals your $500 profit divided by your $1,000 you
risked to trade.
» More information on Margin Trading
Rollover/Interest Rate
For positions open at 5pm EST, there is a daily rollover interest rate
that a trader either pays or earns, depending on your established
margin and position in the market. If you do not want to earn or pay
interest on your positions, simply make sure it is closed at 5pm EST,
the established end of the market day.
Since every currency trade involves borrowing one currency to buy
another, interest rollover charges are an inherent part of FX trading.
Interest is paid on the currency that is borrowed, and earned on the
one that is purchased. If a client is buying a currency with a higher
interest rate than the one he/she is borrowing, the net differential
will be positive and the client will earn funds as a result.
» Click Here for Forex Trading Course
» See Dealing Details
Analysis of Foreign Exchange Markets
Foreign exchange traders base their decisions on either technical analysis and fundamental analysis.
Technical traders use charts, trend lines, support and resistance
levels, mathematical models and other means to identify opportunities
and drive trading decisions. Click here for more information on Technical Analysis
Fundamental traders identify trading opportunities by analyzing economic information.Click here for more information on Fundamental Analysis
24-Hour Access to the World
When you choose to trade currencies, you’re choosing greater freedom in
your trading. With the ability to trade forex 24 hours a day, 5.5 days
a week with extreme liquidity, you participate when you want to, not
when the market dictates.
The market is able to stay open 24 hours a day, 5.5 days a
week, because trading begins with the open in Australia, and flows
through the open and close of the major financial trading centers in
Asia, Europe, the United States and back again to Australia.
The daily foreign currency trading volume is determined by
which markets are open at any point in time. When international market
open times overlap, such as when the U.S. and British market are open
simultaneously, greater trading volume is seen, resulting in peak
trading.
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