Thứ ba, tháng một 10, 2012

Prices Are Relative in Forex Trading

Let’s pick up where we left off in the last article on the basic happenings of the foreign exchange market. We mentioned that people buy and sell currencies for one another, but we need to establish how these prices are set.

In forex, prices for currencies are relative to one another.

How forex prices work

It’s hard to imagine giving a price for a currency in another currency. That just doesn’t make sense; it’s much easier to understand currency value as what we can exchange it for.

We can easily know that 1.25 US Dollars is enough to buy a soda–a Coca-Cola. However, how can traders know that $1.25 is equal to 1 Euro, .80 Pounds, or 10 Mexican Pesos?

It’s the economy!

In many ways, the value of each currency is tied to the performance of the economy it represents.

When the American economy is performing well, the dollar is likely to rise in value against other currencies. Thus, holding dollars is very much like investing in every person, company, and government in America, since the value of the dollar is dependent on everyone’s success.

Isn’t it great we all benefit from the success of everyone else? A strong economy almost always leads to a stronger national currency.

Taking that point to its logical conclusion, it would make sense that when the US economy is strong, so too is the dollar. Thus, the dollar’s value rises against other, weaker economies. A new perspective: if the US economy is growing and Mexico was experiencing a recession, the US dollar would likely be a stronger investment than the Mexican Peso. The market would reflect this, and it would take more Pesos to buy a dollar.

Investors who notice this trend can profit by speculating on the changes in currency values. If the dollar is soon to rise against the Peso, a trader could exchange Pesos for dollars through a currency broker. This trader would make a profit after the exchange rates change in his or her favor.

For example: Assume that we borrow 10 Mexican Pesos and trade them for 1 US Dollar.

If the currency rates change so that now it takes 11 Pesos to buy 1 US Dollar, we can exchange our US Dollar for 11 pesos, pay back the 10 pesos we borrowed, and enjoy a 1 peso profit. That one peso profit, at the current exchange rate of 11:1, is worth $.09. We made a 9% return on our dollars!

This is the very simple core of the foreign exchange market. When traders speak of buying and selling currencies, they’re really just talking about swapping one currency for another to make a profit. Of course, the full story is slightly more complicated, but keep reading and we’ll share all the nitty-gritty details.

What is Forex?

To put it in very simple terms, the foreign exchange market is a currency market, where investment banks, institutions, commercial companies, and individual investors go to buy, sell, and ultimately swap one currency for one another.

Different currencies are used in different places around the world. In the United States, we use the US dollar, which is our currency. In Australia, the official currency is the Australian Dollar. In Great Britain, they use the Pound. Europe uses the Euro.

All of these currencies have a different value, which is dependent on other currencies.
So what is forex?

Forex is the foreign exchange market. The foreign exchange market is a virtual market where investors buy and sell currencies for other currencies.

If you’ve traveled out of your home country before, you’ve interacted with the foreign exchange market and you didn’t even know it.

If you were to travel from the United States to Canada, you would trade your US Dollars for Canadian dollars at a bank, airport teller, or any currency exchange service. In trading your US dollars for Canadian Dollars, you participated on the global forex market.

But we’re just small fry in this massive global market.

You see, we’re just individuals. We don’t have tons and tons of money like banks, institutional investors, hedge fund managers, or mega-corporations. In comparison to these oversized professionals, we’re merely a drop in the bucket.

Mega-corporations rely on the foreign exchange market to trade in their currencies that they earn all around the world. Walmart, one of the largest retail companies in the world, has stores in 44 countries around the globe, even though it is based in the United States.

When it earns money in France, the company isn’t paid in dollars. Walmart gets paid in Euros. The company has to trade its Euros in for dollars to account for profits and losses.

Naturally, Walmart participates in the foreign exchange market to convert its foreign currencies into its home currency.

You Don’t Have to Be Big to Trade Forex

But you don’t have to be a Fortune 500 company to trade on the foreign exchange market. In fact, many traders make money in foreign exchange in buying and selling currencies for a profit. We’ll get to this in the following tutorials, but the point needs to be made that:

There are many reasons currencies are swapped for one another
You don’t have to be a millionaire or billionaire to trade forex

By now you’re probably wondering how we establish a price for money. We’ll get to that in the next tutorial…

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