Beginners General Forex

Similar documents
CONTENTS. What is Forex Advantages of Forex Trading. 5. Currency Pairs Categories.. 6. Forex Trading Sessions...

Forex Currency Pairs Forex Terminology Spread Lot Size. Margin and Leverage Pip Value Volume. BearBullTraders.com. All Right Reserved.

Forex trading. Forex Trading

Trading Conditions. Maxrich Group Futures Galleria

MEET THE FOREX MARKET

FOREX. made easy. UNDERSTANDING THE BASICS. An educational tool by Blackwell Global.

Copyright Alpha Markets Ltd. Page 1


'WHEN IS IT THE BEST TIME TO TRADE THE FOREX MARKET'

Pay and Start Accounts Getting started

KEY CONCEPTS. Understanding Currencies

Account Types Mini Standard VIP Premium Temporary Benefit No Spread No Commission

Market Overview. Indices Week Open Week Close Change NASDAQ DOW JONES

GLOSSARY OF TERMS -A- ASIAN SESSION 23:00 08:00 GMT. ASK (OFFER) PRICE

Understanding Technical analysis for forex trading

Monthly Statistics June 2014

Medusa FX Option Trading Platform

Basics of Foreign Exchange Market in India

CFD TRADING IN A FEW SIMPLE WORDS

Monthly Statistics August 2014

Monthly Statistics April 2014

MYFX MARKETS PRODUCT SCHEDULE

FX Liquidity and Market Metrics: New Results Using CLS Bank Settlement Data. Online Appendix: Supplemental Tables and Figures February 2, 2019

Introduction: Why Forex?

Welcome to FOREX e-book

Forex Product Specification Sheet

What is Forex? History of the Forex Market

Henyep Capital Markets (UK) Limited Key Investor Document - CFDs

TRADING RULES FX AND PRECIOUS METAL Effective May 01, 2017

High Risk Investment Disclaimer

GUIDE TO ONLINE FOREX TRADING

TOP TRADER OVERVIEW April 30, 2012 Version 1.0

AN INTRODUCTION TO TRADING CURRENCIES

T R A D E FX BASIC. 1. What is Forex? 2. 8 Majors. 3. What is bought and sold? 4. Types of Charts. 5. Basic Terms EBOOK 01.

WHY TRADE FX WITH SAXO?

Spot Forex Trading Guide

AN INTRODUCTION TO TRADING CURRENCIES

HYCM (Europe) Ltd Key Investor Document - CFDs

SGT Markets Product Schedule and Business conditions.

The Forex Market Community. Major Currencies in the Forex Market

STANDARD VARIABLE ACCOUNT

SPECULATING WITH FOREX CFDS

WHY TRADE FOREX? hat is Forex? NEW TO FOREX GUIDE

Currency Derivatives

Lecture 4. Types of Exchange Arrangements Rates of Exchange

INTRODUCING BROKER PROSPECTUS

EURUSD Market Guide and Volatility Analysis WHITE PAPER

INTRODUCING BROKER PROSPECTUS

The gawk the talk strategy is suitable for all currency pairs listed on the broker s platform, especially the seven major currency pairs of:

WHITE LABEL PROSPECTUS

All in all Forex is money! WHEN DID IT ALL BEGINE?

Market Overview. Indices Week Open Week Close Change NASDAQ DOW JONES

STANDARD VARIABLE ACCOUNT

Buy rules: Sell rules: Strategy #2. Martingale hedging with exponential lot increase... 6

WHITE LABEL PROSPECTUS

Trading Conditions. The fee is calculated based on the open positions a trader has left overnight. It is debited at 00:00 GMT, as follows:

STANDARD VARIABLE ACCOUNT

INTRODUCTION TO FOREX

From second quarter 2014 to first quarter 2015, FXCM traders closed more than half of trades at a gain. Yet the average forex trader lost money.

Instrument Tick Value* Tick Size Currency Trading Days Trading Hours Contract size (1 lot) Notes Financing Charges Spot FX

This strategy is suitable for all currency pairs listed on the broker s platform, especially the seven major currency pairs of:

PRODUCT INFORMATION. paddypowertrader. Contents: FUTURES INDICES

Introduction To Foreign Exchange

Currency Pairs and The Best Time To Trade Them Pairs?

Quality of Execution Study

MetaTrader Forex Trading Guide

AED United Arab Emirates Dirham SAR Saudi Riyal. AUD Australian Dollar SEK Swedish Krona. CAD Canadian Dollar SGD Singapore Dollar

INTRODUCTION TO FOREX

Table of Fees and Commissions Valid from: 12 th February, 2018

Market Overview. Indices Week Open Week Close CHANGE NASDAQ DOW JONES NIKKEI

Market Overview. Indices Week Close LTP Change NASDAQ DOW JONES NIKKEI

Process Driven, Limited Risk FX Trading. 08 April 2008

Mastering The FOREX Market Beginner Course

STANDARD CFD - Floating Spread Financial Instruments. MetaTrader. Starting 06 November Standard Transaction Spread in Pips

FOREX BASICS & SECRETS

Key Information Document - Forex

Part 1 Forex Trading. What is Forex?

1. Exchange Rates Definition: An exchange rate is a price: The relative price of two currencies.

MAKE MORE OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE

Product Disclousure Statement

THE 10 IDEAS BEHIND FOREX TRADING

Crypto & Forex. Three-Way concept for a profitable future! Whitepaper 1.0

Henyep Capital Markets (UK) Limited Key Investor Document - «CFDs»

User Guide. PivotBreaker. Brought to you by Equitimax. A trading method for forex. Equitimax

FX Long-term valuation G10 currencies

Contract Specifications

CURRENCY PAIRS GUIDE

CME Chapter 13 Spot FX Transactions

Forex Renko Charts FX Trading System

PROFESSIONAL CFD - Floating Spread Market Execution Offer. xstation. Starting 06 November Commission for opening a transaction

MT4 Trading Manual. February 2017

Bull Spreads 101. A Nadex Bull Spread is a limited risk contract which places an absolute floor and ceiling on a trader s losses and profits.

Currency: USDJPY, USDCHF, AUDUSD, USDCAD, EURCHF, EURGBP, GBPUSD, EURUSD.

TCA metric #2. TCA and fair execution. The metrics that the FX industry must use.

Margin Requirements and Trading Limits

TECHNICAL REPORT DAILY RESEARCH TEAM. 04 October 2016 DISCLAIMER & DISCLOSURES

Trend 1 Volatility 2 Skew 3 Correlation 4. Trades. AUD/USD Bear! 73 Rich 49 Even Sell! Short Call Spread

Trend 1 Volatility 2 Skew 3 Correlation 4. Trades. AUD/USD Bear 46 Fair 2 Puts! Sell Short Call Spread

FX Trading Strategies for August 7, 2018

Trend 1 Volatility 2 Skew 3 Correlation 4. Trades. AUD/USD Bear 34 Cheap 8 Puts! Sell Long Put Spread

Transcription:

Beginners General Forex What is Forex? Forex is the abbreviation of Foreign Exchange. It is also referred to as FX or Currency Market or just forex. It is a global decentralized market for the trading of currencies. This includes all aspects of buying, selling and exchanging currencies at current or determined prices. The amount of money being exchanged on daily basis worldwide reaches an average of $5 trillion traded. The forex market is bigger than stock exchanges or any other regulated market in the world. The fact that the forex market is big also makes it very liquid, which means that at all times you can find another hand on the other side willing to exchange money with you. The forex market is composed of many participants. Retails traders, which is us, constitute around $2 trillion out of the $5 trillion traded daily. Figure 1 NYSE vs Forex Size

What moves the Forex Market? There are many factors that can change the price of a currency against another currency. If that price changes, then it is said that the market has moved. If for example, US Dollar strengthens, then most probably it is became stronger against Euro, Sterling, Yen, etc.. As such, the whole market might move in one direction, i.e. US dollar strength. The factors that affect the market or trading prices can have two types of effects: Either short term or long term. So there are factors that can cause a long term movement in the market, and factors that can have a short term (short lived) effect on the prices. At the end of the day it is the reaction of the traders, the big market players, big banks, big hedge funds, and others who move the market. When they start buying a currency then that currency will start strengthening against other currencies. The question now is what triggers such actions? Why would banks start buying or selling a certain currency? Usually geopolitical factors, economic releases, economic changes, changes in monetary policies of central banks, and other important factors can trigger such decision to buy or sell. Some economic releases can have a spontaneous short term lived effect of prices and some might have a long term effect. Depending on the type of the news, the reaction, and how the market players perceive it, the result might be either short or long term lived. Figure 2 Economic releases are usually market movers

Who, when, and why trade forex Before 15 years, only big banks and big hedge funds had access to the forex market. Thanks to the internet and to various technology providers which made forex available to almost everyone. Individual traders are usually called retail traders. All they need is an internet connection, a computer or a smart phone, and an account with a broker. Online brokers made forex trading easily accessible. While becoming a successfully trader and making profit might be hard to achieve, yet trading itself has been made easy. Usually you will need an account with a forex broker, deposit funds to cover your trading needs, and start trading immediately. The beauty of Forex is that you can trade 24 hours a day 5 days a week. Since the forex market is a decentralized market (prices do not come from one place), prices and trading are available 24 hours a day. When banks in Europe close after hours, banks in USA are still open, and when banks in the USA close, banks in Asia are open. Having this mentality in place, means that the market and pricing will be available 24 hours a day. Figure 3 Forex Market Sessions Figure 3 above shows how different countries / different banks cover the pricing and market availability for 24 hours. You can access the forex market though your broker. Most brokers allow trading from 22:00 GMT Sunday and until 22:00 GMT Friday. (Times can vary a bit from broker to broker and depends also on summer and winter times.) Finally, forex has become very popular over the last 15 years and many brokerage firms started offering online forex broker. The list below is just a few reasons why many retails traders decide to trade forex: 1. You can trade anytime during weekdays, day or night 2. You can trade from the comfort of your home 3. You can make profit if prices went down (also you can lose depending on your trade type) as opposed to stock market where you can only profit if market went up 4. Brokers give you purchase power or leverage, where you need to only deposit a fraction of the amount traded.

Currency Pairs Currencies are traded in pairs. Before we explain this, you should understand how currencies are being represented. Look at the table below: Figure 4 Currencies abbreviations and nicknames Brokers will always show you the prices before you trade. The prices are shown for currency pairs. So if you want to trade EURO against the US Dollar, then you will need to trade the EUR/USD pair, most of the time represented as EURUSD. If you want to trade the British Sterling against the US Dollar then you will need to look for GBPUSD on your trading platform. Here are the most popular traded pairs: Figure 5 Popular currency pairs EURUSD, GBPUSD, USDCAD, USDCHF and USDJPY are called the major currency pairs. AUDUSD, NZDUSD are usually called minor pairs. EURCHF, EURGBP, GBPJPY, GBPNZD, EURNZD etc are called crosses, as they do not involve USD.

Other currency pairs such as USDMXN, USDZAR, USDNOK, EURMXN etc.. are called exotics. Pricing and Quotes Prices or rates are called Quotes. When you see on your trading platform that EURUSD is 1.2010 it means that every $1 is equal to 1.2010 euros. Currency pairs are usually quoted with either 4 or 5 digits after the decimal point in order to provide the most accuracy possible. Spreads, pip, bid & ask Have a look at the below figure Figure 6 Spread and pip The above figure is self-explanatory. Brokers quote the clients with two prices. The Bid and the Ask. The Bid is always the selling price (where clients sell) and the Ask is the buying price (where the client buys). The difference between the bid and the ask is the spread. The smaller the spread the cheaper is for the client to trade. The 4 th unit after the decimal point is called the pip, while the 5 th one (if it exists) is called the pipette, point or fraction of a pip. Leverage

Leverage is purchase power. With leverage the broker gives you multiple times your account balance as purchase power. Usually your broker will give you the freedom to choose the leverage you want from a set of available leverages. For example your broker might offer to choose leverage between 1:1 to 1:500. The higher the leverage the more power you have. If your account has a 1:400 leverage, this means that you can buy or sell an amount equal to 400 times your account available funds. For example if you deposit 1000 USD with your broker and your account is set to 1:400 leverage then you can buy or sell the amount of 1000 x 400 USD or 400.000 USD. Now this is a huge amount. Buy or selling big amount can lead to huge profits or huge losses. As such, high leverage can work in the favor or against the trader. Figure 7 Leverage Lots and pip value The lot is defined as 100.000 units.

Figure 8 Lot size and pip value for EURUSD The above figure corresponds to EURUSD. If 100.000 units are to be traded, then this is equivalent to 1 lot, which is usually called volume. Once the trade is executed, any pip move is equal to $10 usd profit or loss depending on the direction of the move. If you are to trade any currency against the USD, where USD is the quote currency (ex: XXXUSD), then each pip is equal to $10 for every lot. If you are to trade any currency against the GBP for example EURGBP (ex: XXGBP), then every pip is equal to 10GBP for every lot. If you are to trade any currency against the JPY for example USDJPY or EURJPY (ex: xxxjpy) then every pips is equal to 1000 JPY for every lot. Understanding the structure of a trade An open trade which has not been closed yet, is called a trading position or only an open position. An open position has a certain structure as below: Order number: It is the unique number of your order. You can use this as a reference number whenever you have any enquiry with your broker. Time: Is the accurate time of opening your position. It contains the Date and Time of opening the trade. Type: Buy or Sell. Sometimes BUY is referred to as Long and Sell is referred to as Short Size: Volume in Lots

Symbol: It is the traded currency pair Price: Opening Price S/L: It is the rate (price) at loss where you want the trade to be automatically closed if the market reached that level. This is the maximum loss you are willing to take. T/P: It is the rate (price) at profit where you want the trade to be automatically closed if the market reached that level. This is the maximum profit you want the system to close your trade at. Price: This is current market price Swap: This is the overnight charge. If you leave your position open overnight, then you will be either charged or credited a small amount of money that will appear under this column. Profit: It is the current profit or loss on the trade. This is called unreazlied profit/loss. It will only reflect on your balance after the trade is closed.