The Foreign Exchange
market, also referred to as the "FOREX" is the
biggest and largest financial market in the
world. It has a daily average turnover of US$1.9
trillion- just imagine that amount of money!
Don't you want to join this trillion-dollar
industry?
FOREX is the simultaneous buying of one
currency and selling of another. Currencies are
traded in pairs, for example Euro/US Dollar (EUR/USD)
or US Dollar/Japanese Yen (USD/JPY). So
basically, FOREX is trading.
There are two reasons to buy and sell
currencies. About 5% of daily turnover is from
companies and governments that buy or sell
products and services in a foreign country or
must convert profits made in foreign currencies
into their domestic currency.
The other 95% is trading for profit, or what
you call speculation. Investors frequently trade
on information they believe to be superior and
relevant, when in fact it is not and is fully
discounted by the market.
On one side of each speculative stock trade
is a participant who believes he has superior
information and on the other side is another
participant who believes his information is
superior.
For speculators, the best trading
opportunities are with the most commonly traded
(and therefore most liquid- meaning its in cash
or convertible to cash) currencies, called "the
Majors." Today, more than 85% of all daily
transactions involve trading of the Majors.
A true 24-hour market, FOREX trading begins
each day in Sydney, and moves around the globe
as the business day begins in each financial
center, first to Tokyo, London, and New York.
Unlike any other financial market, investors can
respond to currency fluctuations caused by
economic, social and political events at the
time they occur - real time- day or night.
The FOREX market is considered an Over The
Counter (OTC) or 'interbank' market. This is
because the transactions are conducted between
two counterparts over the telephone or via an
electronic network. Trading is not centralized
on an exchange compared to stocks and futures
markets.
Understanding FOREX quotes
Reading a FOREX quote may seem a bit
confusing at first. However, it's really quite
simple if you remember two things: 1) The first
currency listed first is the base currency and
2) the value of the base currency is always 1.
The US dollar is the centerpiece of the FOREX
market and is normally considered the 'base'
currency for quotes. In the "Majors", this
includes USD/JPY, USD/CHF and USD/CAD. For these
currencies and many others, quotes are expressed
as a unit of $1 USD per the second currency
quoted in the pair. For example, a quote of USD/JPY
110.01 means that one U.S. dollar is equal to
110.01 Japanese yen.
When the U.S. dollar is the base unit and a
currency quote goes up, it means the dollar has
appreciated in value and the other currency has
weakened. If the USD/JPY quote we previously
mentioned increases to 113.01, the dollar is
stronger because it will now buy more yen than
before.
The three exceptions to this rule are the
British pound (GBP), the Australian dollar (AUD)
and the Euro (EUR). In these cases, you might
see a quote such as GBP/USD 1.7366, meaning that
one British pound equals 1.7366 U.S. dollars.
In these three currency pairs, where the U.S.
dollar is not the base rate, a rising quote
means a weakening dollar, as it now takes more
U.S. dollars to equal one pound, euro or
Australian dollar.
In other words, if a currency quote goes
higher, that increases the value of the base
currency. A lower quote means the base currency
is weakening.
Currency pairs that do not involve the U.S.
dollar are called cross currencies, but the
premise is the same. For example, a quote of EUR/JPY
127.95 signifies that one Euro is equal to
127.95 Japanese yen.
When trading FOREX you will often see a
two-sided quote, consisting of a 'bid' and
'offer'. The 'bid' is the price at which you can
sell the base currency (at the same time buying
the counter currency). The 'ask' is the price at
which you can buy the base currency (at the same
time selling the counter currency).