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Foreign exchange (FOREX or FX) is the simultaneous buying and
selling of one country’s currency for that of another. Profits are
gained when the value of the currency changes in favor of the
trader.
FOREX is the largest financial market in the world, with a daily
average turnover of more than $1.9 trillion, more than 30x the US
equity market. Examples of currency trading pairs are US
Dollar/Japanese Yen (USD/JPY) and Euro/US Dollar (EUR/USD). The most
traded currencies (most liquid), known as the “Majors,” include
the US Dollar, Euro, British Pound, Japanese Yen, Swiss Franc,
Australian Dollar, and Canadian Dollar.
The FOREX market operates 24 hours a day through an electronic
network of banks, corporations and individual traders. The market
has no physical location and no central exchange.
Trading begins each day in Sydney, and moves around the globe first
to Tokyo, London, and ends in 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, day or
night.
Buying
/ Selling
In FOREX, currencies are priced and traded in pairs. You
simultaneously buy one currency and sell another. Traders can
determine which pair of currencies they wish to trade. For example,
suppose the current war and political concerns caused investors to
put their money in a more stable currency, such as the Euro. This
will cause the U.S. Dollar to weaken and the Euro to strengthen.
Traders expecting this effect will take advantage of this situation
by buying the Eurodollar in the EUR/USD (Eurodollar / U.S. Dollar).
Clearly, the objective of the trade is that the market rate or price
will change so that the currency you bought (the Euro) has increased
its value relative to the one you sold (U.S. Dollar). If you have
bought a currency and the price appreciates in value, in order to
lock in the profit, you must sell the currency back. An open
position is one in which a trader has not sold/bought back the
equivalent amount to effectively close the position. In an open
position, the profit is not locked in. By
trading currency pairs, one currency valued against another, a rate
of worth has been established. After all, a country's currency has
value only relative to the currency of another country.
Just like in all markets, there are two prices for every currency
pair. The difference between these two prices is the spread, or the
cost of the trade.
There are two rates for all currency pairs: the bid, or the rate at
which traders can sell, and the ask, or the rate at which traders
can buy. There is a small difference between the two. This
difference, known as the spread, defines the cost of the trade.
Spreads are a part of all markets, but are typically
"hidden" in the broker-based equities and futures markets.
When trading directly with ZenithFX, there are no commission charges
for trading.
(GFT is compensated by revenues from its
activities as a currency dealer, including proceeds from buying,
selling, converting, as well as holding currencies and interest on
deposited funds and rollover fees.)
History of
Foreign Exchange
Forex vs
Futures
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