Showing posts with label Trading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trading. Show all posts

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Starting in FOREX Trading


Topic Covers | Starting, with FOREX,  Trading

To start trading on FOREX, one must first learn how to read FOREX quotes. Foreign exchange quotes are always listed in pairs (e.g. USD/JPY 109.2): the first listed currency is known as the base currency with a constant value of 1 unit while the currency listed in the second is known as counter.

In our given example, USD/JPY 109.2 means a dollar of United States Dollar is equal to 109.2 Japanese Yen. In other words, the quote shows the relative value of one currency compare to the other. It means the value USD had been increased when USD/JPY quote goes up
However, a two-sided quote (e.g. EUR/USD 1.2435/1.2440) consisting of a 'bid' and ask is often seen. The bid price is the price at which you can sell the base currency while the ask price is where you can buy the base currency. The different of bid & ask price is commonly known as spread. In the example of EUR/USD 1.2435/1.2440, this means you can buy 1 Euro Dollar with 1.2440 USD or sell 1 Euro 1.2435. Currency brokers make their profit through these differences of bid & ask price and this is how they manage to provide their services to individual investors without charging them commission fees. If you are new to trading it makes sense to deal in the more popular currencies. There are two main reasons for this. Firstly you do not want to be left with a currency where there is little interest and you may have difficulty selling. Secondly the spread between the bid/ask prices is likely to be narrower, making it easier to make a profit.

Commodity Prices And Currency Movements


Topic Cover | Commodity Prices,Currency Movements, Trading

Find out which currencies are most affected by fluctuations in gold and oil prices, and improve your trading.

Predicting the next move in the markets is the key to making money in trading, but putting this simple concept into action is much harder than it sounds. Professional forex traders have long known that trading currencies requires looking beyond the world of FX.

The fact is that currencies are moved by many factors - supply and demand, politics, interest rates, economic growth, and so on. More specifically, since economic growth and exports are directly related to a country's domestic industry, it is natural for some currencies to be heavily correlated with commodity prices.

The top three currencies that have the tightest correlations with commodities are the Australian dollar, the Canadian dollar and the New Zealand dollar. Other currencies that are also impacted by commodity prices but have a weaker correlation are the Swiss franc and the Japanese yen. Knowing which currency is correlated with what commodity can help traders understand and predict certain market movements.

Here we look at currencies correlated with oil and gold and show you how you can use this information in your trading.

Forex Fair Warning


Topic Cover | Fair Warning, Forex, Exchange, Trading, Market

This tutorial is designed to help you develop a logical, intelligent approach to currency trading base on 10 key rules. The systems and ideas presented here stem from years of observation of price action in this market and provide high probability approaches to trading both trend and countertrend setups, but they are by no means a surefire guarantee of success. No trade setup is ever 100% accurate. That is why we show you failures as well as successes - so that you may learn and understand the profit possibilities, as well as the potential pitfalls of each idea that we present.

The 10 Rules

1.   Never Let a Winner Turn Into a Loser
2.   Logic Wins, Impulse Kills
3.   Never Risk More Than 2% per Trade
4.   Trigger Fundamentally, Enter and Exit Technically
5.   Always Pair Strong With Weak
6.   Being Right but Being Early Simply Means That You Are Wrong
7.   Know the Difference Between Scaling In and Adding to a Loser
8.   What is Mathematically Optimal Is Psychologically Impossible
9.   Risk Can Be Predetermined, but Reward Is Unpredictable
10. No Excuses, Ever

The Basics of the Foreign Exchange Market


Topic Cover | Basics, Forex, Exchange, Trading, Market


At the completion of this lesson, you should understand:
The characteristics of foreign exchange and how it differs from other financial markets.
The driving forces behind today's foreign exchange market activity.
How the advent of online foreign exchange trading on margin has benefited the individual trader.

Overview:

  •  What is Foreign Exchange?
  •  A Short History of the Foreign Exchange Trading Market
  •  Trading Margin FX
  •  Margin FX - The New Frontier
  •  Summary

Exercises

Test Your Knowledge

What is Foreign Exchange?Foreign exchange consists of trading one type of currency for another. Unlike other financial markets, the FX market has no physical location and no central exchange. It operates "over the counter" through a global network of banks, corporations and individuals trading one currency for another. The FX market is the world's largest financial market, operating 24 hours a day with enormous amounts of money traded on a daily basis.

Unlike any other financial market, investors can respond to currency fluctuations caused by economic, political and social events at the time they occur, without having to wait for exchanges to open. Access to modern news services, charting services, 24- hour dealing desks and sophisticated online electronic trading platforms has seen speculation in the FX market explode, particularly for the individual trader.

The currency markets are not new. They've been around for as long as banks have been doing business. What is relatively new is the accessibility of these markets to the individual speculator, particularly the small- to medium-sized trader

A Short History of the Foreign Exchange Trading Market

Topic Cover | A Short History, Forex, Exchange, Trading, Market

Foreign exchange consists of trading one type of currency for another. Unlike other financial markets, the FX market has no physical location and no central exchange. It operates "over the counter" through a global network of banks, corporations and individuals trading one currency for another.

The FX market is the world's largest financial market, operating 24 hours a day with enormous amounts of money traded on a daily basis.

Unlike any other financial market, investors can respond to currency fluctuations caused by economic, political and social events at the time they occur, without having to wait for exchanges to open. Access to modern news services, charting services, 24- hour dealing desks and sophisticated online electronic trading platforms has seen speculation in the FX market explode, particularly for the individual trader.

The currency markets are not new. They've been around for as long as banks have been doing business. What is relatively new is the accessibility of these markets to the individual speculator, particularly the small- to medium-sized trader

Foreign exchange markets originally developed to facilitate crossborder trade conducted in different currencies by governments, companies and individuals. While these markets primarily existed to provide for the international movement of money and capital, even the earliest markets had speculators.

Today, an enormous proportion of FX market activity is being driven by speculation, arbitrage and professional dealing, in which currencies are traded like any other commodity.

Traditionally, retail investors' only means of gaining access to the foreign exchange market was through banks that transacted in large amounts of currencies for commercial and investment purposes. Trading volume has increased rapidly over time, especially after exchange rates were allowed to float freely in 1971.

From 1944 until 1971, most of the world's major currencies were pegged to the US dollar under an arrangement called the Bretton Woods Agreement. Participating countries agreed to try and maintain the value of their currency with a narrow margin against the US dollar and a corresponding rate of gold, as needed. These countries were prohibited from devaluing their currencies to gain a foreign trade advantage. Consequently, the foreign exchange market was relatively static.