Forex Power Trading Course

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Foreign Exchange Trading Demystified

By Damian Papworth

If you ask the average investor about thoughts on good investments, you're unlikely to hear the foreign exchange market as a popular answer. It is confusing to many people, and its high risk factor doesn't help. This article will try to clear up some of the mystery surrounding foreign exchange.

To start, what does it mean to trade in Foreign Exchange markets? How does the process work and what do you use? Well, you use the different types of monetary units from around the world. Investors purchase money, or currency, from a country by selling the currency of another country. The transaction is so common and widespread that international business is impossible without it. You, too, have traded in the foreign exchange market, whether are aware of it or not.

Maybe it was in the course of a vacation out of the country, or on a business trip, that you had to use local money for transactions. Whether you were operating with traveler's cheques, hard cash or on credit, during the course of any transaction there was an exchange that took place. Right away you will realize that the FX Market has been a part of your life.

An example of indirect participation is when you buy imported products in your home country. Products made overseas are usually sold in the currency of the country they were made. When they are sold in a country which is different to the one where they were produced, at some stage someone will need to make a foreign exchange transaction, translating the price of the product from the currency where the product was produced, to the currency where the product was consumed. It could be the producer, an importing company or the retailer that does this. Regardless, when you buy imported products, the currency translation will have occurred and therefore you have indirectly participated in a foreign currency transaction.

Maybe you have been mystified by the fluctuating currencies of different countries. Like most things in the business world the currency's supply versus its demand changes the rate. When a currency comes into high demand, with few sellers on the market, that makes it instantly more valuable. Buyers will pay a higher price to get their hands on it. Conversely, when a currency is unwanted and sellers flood the market looking to dump it, the price goes down. Those willing to take on such an unattractive commodity pay less to do so. The explanation is simple when you think in this manner.

One of the most difficult concepts to grasp is why certain currencies are so volatile. At times, even the experts are left scratching their heads as well, watching the waves of supply and demand with baffled looks on their faces. To succeed in the FX Markets, traders need to keep many different factors in mind and invest with experience, but answers aren't as simple as "yes" or "no" in this game. Formulas are just as scarce, so the more insight a trader has and the more research they've done, the better their chances.

The currency figures of a particular country represent the economic value of that country, thus compared against that of another country. When you start to consider the endless number of factors which can affect an economy in one direction or another, and how some of them defy all logic, you will see the dilemma of anyone who is trading currency for a living.

But your countries economy is only half the equation. We are not measuring the value of your economy alone, rather comparing it against the economy of a different country. Therefore, even if you have a really good understanding of your own economy, you need the same understanding of the other country's economy also.

On top of that, your currency will be stacked up against the entire world's currencies. At this point you need a truly global perspective, weighing extremely diverse factors, before you decide one country's currency will spike in value while another will remain stagnant.

And if you manage to get all your analysis correct, you then need to hope everyone else does too. Currencies can move on investors opinions, expectations met or expectations not met, global sentiments of what is likely to happen as much as global opinion of what has happened. There are fundamental traders (who look at information such as the above to make their decisions) and technical traders. (who just follow graphs and don't care why) Both trader groups can impact the price as they impact supply and demand.

There are even people who buy currencies months and years in advance to lock in a price, to help support business activities unrelated to FX trading. This also impacts price. So you can start to see what a complex equation this can become.

Then there are Foreign Exchange Trading Strategies which don't need to predict if a currency is going to go up or down. It doesn't matter which way the traded currencies move, they make small incremental profits in both directions.

Hopefully, this explanation of various factors affecting the Foreign Exchange market has served to illuminate the subject. - 23310

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