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What Is
Currency Trading?
Currency
trading is the largest market on the planet. It is estimated that in excess of
US$2 trillion is traded every day. Compare this to the New York Stock
Exchange's daily transactions of approximately US$50 billion, and you can see
that the magnitude of the currency trading market exceeds all other equity
markets in the world combined. The practice of currency trading is also
commonly referred to as foreign exchange, Forex, or FX, for short.
All currency has a value relative to other currencies on the planet. Currency
trading uses the purchase and sale of large quantities of currency to leverage
the shifts in relative value into profit.
What is the FX market?
The FX market is different from other markets in some other key ways that are
sure to raise eyebrows. Think that the EUR/USD is going to spiral downward?
Feel free to short the pair at will. There is no uptick rule in FX as there is
in stocks. There are also no limits on the size of your position (as there are
in futures); so, in theory, you could sell $100 billion worth of currency if
you had the capital to do it. If your biggest Japanese client, who also happens
to golf with Toshihiko Fukui, the Governor of the Bank of Japan, told you on
the golf course that BOJ is planning to raise rates at its next meeting, you
could go right ahead and buy as much yen as you like. No one will ever
prosecute you for insider trading should your bet pay off. There is no such
thing as insider trading in FX; in fact, European economic data, such as German
employment figures, are often leaked days before they are officially released.
Which currencies are Traded?
Although some retail dealers trade exotic currencies such as the Thai baht or
the Czech koruna, the majority trade the seven most liquid currency pairs in
the world, which are the four majors:
EUR/USD (euro/dollar)
USD/JPY (dollar/Japanese yen)
GBP/USD (British pound/dollar)
USD/CHF (dollar/Swiss franc)
and the three commodity pairs:
AUD/USD (Australian dollar/dollar)
USD/CAD (dollar/Canadian dollar)
NZD/USD (New Zealand dollar/dollar)
These currency pairs, along with their various combinations (such as EUR/JPY,
GBP/JPY and EUR/GBP) account for more than 95% of all speculative trading in
FX. Given the small number of trading instruments - only 18 pairs and crosses
are actively traded - the FX market is far more concentrated than the stock
market.
About the
Author:
Make Money with Currency Trading?
How? Find out at http://CurrencyTrading.eask.info.
Read more
articles by: Alfred
J.James Article Source: www.iSnare.com
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