The Foreign Exchange market, also referred to as the Forex or FX market, is the largest financial market in the world, with a daily average turnover of well over 1 trillion USD. Unlike other financial markets, the Forex market has no physical location or central exchange. It is an over-the-counter market where buyers and sellers including banks, corporations and private investors conduct business. A true 24-hour market, Forex trading begins each day in Sydney and moves around the globe as the business day begins in each financial center, first to Tokyo, London and New York. Unlike any other financial market, investors can respond to currence fluctuations caused by economic, social and political events at the time they occur - day or night. The huge number and diversity of players involved make it difficult for even governments to control the direction of the market. The unmatched liquidity and around-the-clock global activity make forex the ideal market for active traders.
Traditionally the Forex market was only available to larger entities trading currencies for commercial and investment purposes through banks. Now trading platforms allow smaller financial institutions and retail investors access to a similar level of liquidity as the major foreign exchange banks, by offering a gateway to the primary (Interbank) market.
In the Forex market currencies are always priced in
pairs; therefore all trades result in the simultaneous buying of one currency and the selling of another. The objective of currency trading is to exchange one currency for another in the expectation that the market rate or price will change so that the currency you bought has increased its value relative to the one you sold. If you have bought a currency and the price appreciates in value, the trader must sell the currency back in order to lock in the profit. An
open trade or
position is one in which a trader has either bought or sold one currency pair and has not sold or bought back the equivalent amount to effectively close the position.
The first currency in the pair is referred to as the
base currency and the second currency is the
counter or
quote currency. This means that quotes are expressed as a unit of 1 of the first currency quoted per the other currency quoted in the pair.
As with all financial products, FX quotes include a bid and ask. The
bid is the price at which a market maker is willing to buy (and clients can sell) the base currency in exchange for the counter currency. The
ask is the price at which a market maker will sell (and clients can buy) the base currency in exchange for the counter currency. The difference between the bid and the ask price is referred to as the
spread.
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