Terminology and Market Conventions
If you are going to trade forex you need
to understand the terms and quoting conventions used, especially in
regards to the spot market. The forex market uses 3-letter codes for
all currencies. These are commonly known as SWIFT or ISO codes. For
example, USD is the code for the US Dollar. Here are the codes for the
other primary currencies: AUD: Australian Dollar ( For a complete listing of all currency SWIFT codes, click here. ) Expressing a relational value between
two currencies is done by combining two currency abbreviations in the
fashion of XXX/YYY. This indicates the amount of YYY currency (the
"quote" currency) equivalent to one unit of XXX ("base" currency). For
example if the exchange rate for USD/JPY - the US Dollar to Japanese
Yen rate - was 100 it would mean that each USD is worth 100 JPY. Using this convention, changes up or
down in the quoted exchange rate indicate changes up or down in the
value of the base currency. Using the USD/JPY example again, if the
rate went from 100 to 101 it would mean a 1% increase in the value of
the USD against the JPY. Similarly, a decline from 100 to 99 would
represent a 1% fall in the USD value vs. the JPY. In theory, one could quote the exchange
rates either way around - meaning if USD/JPY is 100 it is the same as
saying JPY/USD is 0.01 (one JPY is worth $0.01). In practice, however,
the forex market has specific conventions for the traded pairs. In most
cases, USD is the base currency, with the other currency in question
being the quote currency. USD/JPY is an example. There are a few exceptions, though. When
it was introduced in 1999, the market authorities decided the Euro
would always be the base currency in all traded pairs. Before that, the
Pound (GBP) held that distinction. Thus, when traded against either of
those, the USD is the quote currency (EUR/USD, GBP/USD). The same also
holds for former British Commonwealth currencies the Australian Dollar
(AUD/USD) and the New Zealand Dollar (NZD/USD). It is worth noting that forex futures
contracts involving currencies as quoted against the US Dollar do not
hold to the spot market convention. Instead they all use the USD as the
quote currency. In the forex you will here the terms
"majors" and "crosses" when traders refer to different categories of
currency pairs. In general terms, the "majors" are the pairs which
include the USD quoted against the other primary industrialized
currencies. Those include the ones listed above. So the majors are as
follows: AUD/USD While technically every currency pairing
is a cross-rate, the term "cross" is most commonly used to refer to
currency pairings which do not include the USD. For example, EUR/JPY is
the Euro-Yen exchange rate. That would be considered a cross. One thing you will notice in the table
is that some pairs are quoted to four decimal places, while others only
go out two places. In general terms, those pairs with values of about
10 or less will go out to four places, while those with higher values
will be quoted only at two places. Regardless of how many decimal places a
currency pair is quote to, though, the term "pip" is used to define a
single price movement value. So, for a two decimal place pair, a pip
would be .01, while for a four decimal place pair a pip would be .0001.
We can see this in the quotes on the
chart, especially when looking at the bid/offer spreads. AUD/JPY is
quoted at 79.60-79.64, which is a 4 pip spread, while AUD/USD is quoted
0.7648-0.7650 for a 2 pip spread. In recent times there has been
introduced the "pipette", which is a fraction of a pip. In essence,
some of the more popular pairs like EUR/USD are trading at five decimal
places now, which is why you can see a spread of 1.5 listed on the
chart (column to the right of the price quote itself). That means the
bid-offer spread is 1 and 5/10 pips. One will sometimes here the term
"figure" in spot forex trading. That is used to refer to a price level
which is a round 100 pip figure. In USD/JPY that would be a multiple of
1 full JPY (such as 104), while in GBP/USD the figure would be a $0.01
multiple (like 1.8800). The term "yard" sometimes comes up as
well. That is used to refer to a one billion base currency transaction.
So a yard of USD/JPY would be $1 billion. It is quite easy to start trading forex.
There are a great many forex brokers available and opening an account
is pretty straightforward. Some things you should consider as you look
to identify the one best suited to you are: Account minimum deposit (if any) Transaction size flexibility Spreads Execution Commissions (if any) Security of deposited funds Allowable leverage Currency pairs available for trading Usability of the trading platform The great thing is that nowadays the
vast majority of brokers have available demo trading platforms you can
use to *******uate their system. Be sure, though, to make note of any
differences there are between the real platform and the demo one. Some
brokers' platforms are both the same across the board, but some have
noticeable differences in things like execution speeds. It wouldn't
hurt to check around the discussion boards to see what others are
saying. Actually, if you are new to forex
trading it is well worth it to spend a while trading via a demo
platform first. It will help you develop and understanding of how it
all works. That way, when you do go live, you will be more confident
and ready for action. Forex market trading is really little
different from an execution perspective than most other markets. You
can buy or sell. In most cases, the same types of orders (stops,
limits, etc.) are available. The trading platforms are very modern and
trades can be done very quickly. Anyone who has ever used an online
trading platform for any other market will have no trouble making the
move to forex and executing trades with ease. For that matter, even
those new to trading will find entering and exiting forex positions a
breeze.Terminology and Market Conventions
Notational Conventions
CAD: Canadian Dollar
CHF: Swiss Franc
EUR: European Euro
GBP: British Pound
JPY: Japanese YenMajors and Crosses
EUR/USD
GBP/USD
USD/CAD
USD/CHF
USD/JPYForex Price Quotes
With
an understanding of what we are looking at, now we can turn out focus
to the actual price quotes. The graphic shows a sample table of quotes
for an array of currency pairs - majors and crosses.Getting in to the Trading
Opening an Account
Making Trades
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