Friday, May 8, 2009

Forex Market Background

Forex Market Background

Presented in cooperation with Forex-Training.com 

The global marketplace has changed dramatically over the past several years. New investment strategies are becoming more important in order to minimize risk, as well as to maintain high portfolio returns. Among the most rewarding of the markets opening up to traders is the Foreign Exchange market. Identifiable trading patterns, as well as comparatively low margin requirements, have rewarding trading opportunities for many.  

In contrast to the world’s stock markets, foreign exchange is traded without the constraints of a central physical exchange. Transactions are instead conducted via telephone or online.  With this transaction structure as its foundation, the Foreign Exchange Market has become by far the largest marketplace in the world.  Average volume in foreign exchange exceeds $1.5 trillion per day versus only $25 billion per day traded on the New York Stock Exchange. This high volume is advantageous from a trading standpoint because transactions can be executed quickly and with low transaction costs (i.e., a small bid/ask spread).  

As a result, foreign exchange trading has long been recognized as a superior investment opportunity by major banks, multinational corporations and other institutions.  Today, this market is more widely available to the individual trader than ever before. 

Spot foreign exchange is always traded as one currency in relation to another.  So a trader who believes that the dollar will rise in relation to the Euro, would sell EURUSD.  That is, sell Euros and buy US dollars.  Forex-Training.com has compiled the following guide for quoting conventions:

Symbol     Currency Pair     Trading Terminology
GBPUSD   British Pound / US Dollar   "Cable"
EURUSD Euro / US Dollar "Euro"
USDJPY US Dollar / Japanese Yen "Dollar Yen"
USDCHF US Dollar / Swiss Franc "Dollar Swiss", or "Swissy"
USDCAD US Dollar / Canadian Dollar "Dollar Canada"
AUDUSD Australian Dollar / US Dollar "Aussie Dollar"
EURGBP Euro / British Pound "Euro Sterling"
EURJPY Euro / Japanese Yen "Euro Yen"
EURCHF Euro / Swiss Franc "Euro Swiss"
GBPCHF British Pound / Swiss Franc "Sterling Swiss"
GBPJPY British Pound / Japanese Yen "Sterling Yen"
CHFJPY Swiss Franc / Japanese Yen "Swiss Yen"
NZDUSD New Zealand Dollar / US Dollar "New Zealand Dollar" or "Kiwi"
USDZAR US Dollar / South African Rand "Dollar Zar" or "South African Rand"
GLDUSD Spot Gold "Gold"
SLVUSD Spot Silver "Silver"

 
Spot Forex versus Currency Futures

Many traders have made the switch from currency futures to spot foreign exchange ("forex") trading.  Spot foreign exchange offers better liquidity and generally a lower cost of trading than currency futures.  Banks and brokers in spot foreign exchange can quote markets 24 hours a day.  Furthermore, the spot foreign exchange market is not burdened by exchange and NFA ("National Futures Association") fees, which are generally passed on to the customer in the form of higher commissions.  For these reasons, virtually all professional traders and institutions conduct most of their foreign exchange dealing in the spot forex market, not in currency futures.

The mechanics of trading spot forex are similar to those of currency futures.  The most important initial difference is the way in which currency pairs are quoted.  Currency futures are always quoted as the currency versus the US dollar.  In Spot forex, some currencies are quoted this way, while others are quoted as the US dollar versus the currency.  For example, in spot forex, EURUSD is quoted the same way as Euro futures.  In other words, if the Euro is strengthening, EURUSD will rise just as Euro futures will rise.  On the other hand, USDCHF is quoted as US dollars with respect to Swiss Francs, the opposite of Swiss Franc futures. So if the Swiss Franc strengthens with respect to the US dollar, USDCHF will fall, while Swiss Franc futures will rise.  The rule in spot forex is that the first currency shown is the currency that is being quoted in terms of direction.  For example, "EUR" in EURUSD and "USD" in USDCHF is the currency that is being quoted.

The table below illustrates which spot currencies move parallel to the futures contract and which move inversely (opposite):

Forex
Symbol
   Currency Pair Futures
Symbol
   Directional
Relationship
GBPUSD British Pound / US Dollar BP Parallel
EURUSD Euro / US Dollar EU Parallel
USDJPY US Dollar / Japanese Yen JY Inverse
USDCHF US Dollar / Swiss Franc SF Inverse
USDCAD US Dollar / Canadian Dollar CD Inverse
AUDUSD Australian Dollar / US Dollar AD Parallel
NZDUSD New Zealand Dollar / US Dollar ND Paralle

Additional training from http://www.forex-markets.com/training.htm

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