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Forex Market 

Why Do Exchange Rates Move ?
Currency Pairs – Points for Comparison
Factors Affecting USD
Factors Affecting USD/JPY
Factors Affecting GBP/USD (Cable)
Factors Affecting EUR/USD
Factors Affecting USD/CHF
A Primer on the FOREX Market
The Fundamentals of FOREX Fundamentals
The Theory of Interest Rate Swap Overhedging

forex  |  forex market  |  forex trading  |  forex broker  |  technical analysis

 

Forex Trading 

Forex Trading - Seven Steps | Forex Vs. Stocks | Forex Vs. Futures | Forex vs. Equities | Forex Risk Management | What is Forex? | Foreign Exchange (Forex) - The Basics | Understanding Forex Quotes | Understanding Margin | Foreign Exchange Risk Management Guidelines | Types of Orders | Calculating P&L | A Primer on the FOREX Market | Rollover charges | Market Terminology
 

What is Forex?

Foreign Exchange (forex) is the simultaneous buying of one currency, and selling of another currency. Daily volume in the currency market exceeds $1.4 trillion, making it the largest and most liquid market in the world. Unlike other financial markets, the forex market has no physical location or central exchange. It is an over-the-counter market where buyers and sellers including banks, corporations, and private investors conduct business. Foreign exchange trading takes place in financial trading centers all over the world, including New York, London, and Tokyo creating one cohesive, international market. The huge number and diversity of players involved make it difficult for even governments to control the direction of the market. The unmatched liquidity and around-the-clock global activity make forex the ideal market for active traders.

Traditionally the forex market was only available to larger entities trading currencies for commercial and investment purposes through banks. Now trading platforms, such as the FX Trading Station, allow smaller financial institutions and retail investors access to a similar level of liquidity as the major foreign exchange banks, by offering a gateway to the primary (Interbank) market.

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Buying/Selling

In the forex market currencies are always priced in pairs; therefore all trades result in the simultaneous buying of one currency and the selling of another. The objective of currency trading is to exchange one currency for another in the expectation that the market rate or price will change so that the currency you bought has increased its value relative to the one you sold. If you have bought a currency and the price appreciates in value, the trader must sell the currency back in order to lock in the profit. An open trade or position is one in which a trader has either bought/sold one currency pair and has not sold/bought back the equivalent amount to effectively close the position.

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Quoting Conventions

The first currency in the pair is referred to as the base currency, and the second currency is the counter or quote currency. The U.S Dollar, as the world’s dominant currency, is usually considered the base currency for quotes, and includes USD/JPY, USD/CHF, and USD/CAD. This means that quotes are expressed as a unit of $1 USD per the other currency quoted in the pair. The exceptions are the Euro, Great Britain pund, and Australian dollar. These currencies are quoted as dollars per foreign currency.

As with all financial products, FX quotes include a "bid" and "ask". The bid is the price at which a market maker ( Forex Day Trading) is willing to buy (and clients can sell) the base currency in exchange for the counter currency. The ask is the price at which a market maker ( Forex Day Trading) will sell (and clients can buy) the base currency in exchange for the counter currency. The difference between the bid and the ask price is referred to as the spread.

In the wholesale market, currencies are quoted using five significant numbers, with the last placeholder called a point or a pip. In forex, like any traded instrument, there is an immediate cost in establishing a position. For example, USD/JPY may bid at 131.40 and ask at 131.45, this five-pip spread defines the trader’s cost, which can be recovered with a favorable currency move in the market.

By quoting both the bid and ask in real time, Laketurion Equities ensures that traders always receive a fair price on all transactions. For other commodities where traders must request a price before dealing, brokers have the opportunity to check a trader's existing position and 'shade' the price (in their favor) a few pips depending on the trader's position.

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Margin

The margin deposit is not a down payment on a purchase of equity, as many perceive margins to be in the stock markets. Rather, the margin is a performance bond, or good faith deposit, to ensure against trading losses. The margin requirement allows traders to hold a position much larger than the account value. Laketurion Equities’ s online trading platform has margin management capabilities, which allow for this high leverage. The trading platform performs an automatic pre-deal check for margin availability, and will only execute the deal if the client has sufficient margin funds in his or her account. The system also calculates the funds needed for current positions and displays this information to clients in real time.

In the event that funds in the account fall below margin requirements, the Laketurion EquitiesDealing Desk will close all open positions. This prevents clients' accounts from falling below the available equity even in a highly volatile, fast moving market.

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Rollover

In the spot forex market trades must be settled in two business days. For example, if a trader sells 100,000 euros on Tuesday, the trader must deliver 100,000 euros on Thursday, unless the position is rolled over. As a service to our traders, FXCM automatically rolls over all open positions i.e. swaps the trade forward to the next settlement date (two business days) at 5:00 PM New York time. The swap rates are determined at the Interbank level and are tradable instruments. In any spot rollover transaction there is a difference in interest rates between the two currencies that will be reflected in the overnight “loan.” If the trader is long the currency with the higher interest rate in the pair, the trader should gain on the spot rollover through the premium relationship of that currency relative to the short currency. The amount of the gain is determined by the interest rate differential between the two currencies, and fluctuates day to day with the movement of prices. For instance, on any given day, the rollover can be $2 per lot for USD/JPY and $15 for GBP/JPY. Rollover fees are shown in dollars, and are posted in the “interest column” on the FX Trading Station every day at 3:00 pm New York time. For day traders that never hold a position overnight, rollover will not affect trading.
Note: For positions that are open on Wednesday and held through 5:00 PM New York time, the amount added or subtracted to an account as a result of rolling over a position tends to be around three times the usual amount. This "3-Day" rollover accounts for settlement of trades through the weekend period.

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What Every Currency Trader Should Know

The forex market is one of the most popular markets for speculation due to its enormous size, liquidity, and tendency for currencies to move in strong trends. An enticing aspect of trading currencies is the high degree of leverage available. Forex Day Trading allows positions to be leveraged up to 100:1. Without proper risk management, this high degree of leverage can lead to enormous swings between profit and loss. Knowing that even seasoned traders suffer losses, speculation in the forex market should only be conducted with risk capital funds that if lost will not significantly affect one's personal financial well being.

The Forex Day Trading Mini account was designed for those new to online currency trading. There is a smaller deposit required to open an Forex Day Trading Mini account and trading sizes are 1/10th the size of a regular account. The smaller trade size enables traders to take smaller risks. The Forex Day Trading Mini is intended to introduce traders to the excitement of currency trading while minimizing risk.

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Forex Risk Management | Page 6 of 15  | Foreign Exchange (Forex) - The Basics
Last 20 Forex Market Articles  

Forex Market : Why Do Exchange Rates Move ?
In a floating exchange-rate environment, the exchange-rate responds to many factors including the flow of imports and exports, the flow of capital, relative inflation rates, etc. Often, limits are placed on exchange-rate fluctuations according to government policies.
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Forex Market : Currency Pairs – Points for Comparison
Foreign exchange is always traded in currency pairs, such as EUR/USD (Euro/U.S. Dollar.) All trades are the purchase of one kind of currency with another. The first currency in the pair is referred to as the base currency. The base currency is the one that provides a baseline for the purchase or sale. Think of the currency pair as an instrument to be bought or sold. You are buying either the Euro or the U.S. Dollar in either case.
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Forex Market : Factors Affecting USD
Key Fundamentals Impacting the U.S. Dollar Federal Reserve Bank (Fed): The U.S. Central Bank has full independence in setting monetary policy to achieve maximum non-inflationary growth. The Fed’s chief policy signals are: open market operations, the Discount Rate and the Fed Funds rate. Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC): The FOMC is responsible for making decisions on monetary policy, including the crucial interest rate announcements it makes 8 times a year. The 12-member committee is made up of 7 members of the Board of Governors; the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; while the remaining four seats carry one-year term each, in a rotating selection of the presidents of the 11 other Reserve Banks.
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Forex Market : Factors Affecting USD/JPY
Ministry of Finance: The MoF is the single most important political and monetary institution in Japan. Its influence in guiding the currency is more significant than the ministries of finance of the US, UK or Germany, despite the gradual measures to decentralize decision-making. MoF officials often make statements regarding the economy that have notable impacts on the yen. These statements include verbal intervention aimed at avoiding undesirable appreciation/depreciation of the yen. Key officials most likely to move the market are the following:
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Forex Market : Factors Affecting GBP/USD (Cable)
Bank of England (BoE): Under the Bank of England Act of June 1997, the BoE obtained operational independence in setting monetary policy to deliver price stability and to support the government’s growth and employment objectives. The price stability objective is set by the government's inflation target, defined as 2.5% annual growth in Retail Prices Index excluding mortgages (RPI-X). Hence, despite its independence in setting monetary policy, the BoE remains dependent upon having to meet the inflation target set by the Treasury.
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Forex Market : Factors Affecting USD/CHF
Swiss National Bank (SNB): The Swiss Central Bank has maximum independence in setting monetary and exchange rate policy. Unlike most Central banks, the SNB does not use a specific money market rate to guide monetary conditions. Until fall 1999, the Bank used foreign exchange swaps and repurchase agreements as the main instruments to impact money supply and interest rates. Liquidity management has characteristically affected the Swiss franc due to the use of Foreign Exchange Swaps. If the Bank wishes to inject liquidity, it buys foreign currency (primarily dollars) against Swiss francs, thereby pressuring the currency.
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Forex Market : Factors Affecting EUR/USD
The Eurozone: The 12 countries that have adopted the euro in order of GDP: Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Finland, Portugal, Ireland, Luxembourg and Greece. European Central Bank: Controls monetary policy for the eurozone. The decision making body is the Governing Council, which consists of the Executive Board and the governors of the national central banks. The Executive Board consists of the ECB President, Vice-President, and four other members:
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Forex Market : The Theory of Interest Rate Swap Overhedging
The most obvious case of underhedging or overhedging arises when both legs of the swap have fixed rates. For example, it is common when hedging foreign exchange (FX) to have both legs of the swap be fixed in terms of interest rates. However, the legs are then specified in different currencies. For example, suppose that XYZ Company borrows DM20 million German marks at a rate R=8.00%.In order to hedge its FX exposure, it negotiates a swap to pay out a fixed rate P=10.27% and receive a hedged fixed rate H=f(P)=10.20%. Our general definitions are as follows:
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Forex Market : The Fundamentals of FOREX Fundamentals
Those trading in the foreign exchange market (FOREX) rely on the same two basic forms of analysis that are used in the stock market: fundamental analysis and technical analysis. The uses of technical analysis in FOREX are much the same: price is assumed to reflect all news, and the charts are the objects of analysis. But unlike companies, countries have no balance sheets, so how can fundamental analysis be conducted on a currency? Since fundamental analysis is about looking at the intrinsic value of an investment, its application in FOREX entails looking at the economic conditions that affect the valuation of a nation's currency. Here we look at some of the major fundamental factors that play a role in the movement of a currency.
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Forex Market : The Concept of a Forward Transaction
Spot Transactions, Forwards and Futures. In order to understand options, it is necessary to understand the basics of some related financial instruments: forward and futures contracts. Forward contracts, futures and options contracts all have one thing in common:They are related to a future date.
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