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FX
Currency Trading Basics - Part 2
Supply
& Demand Fundamentals
BUYING/SELLING
CURRENCY:
Cardinal
Rule: All trades result in the buying of one currency and the
selling of another, simultaneously.
The
objective of currency trading is to exchange one currency for
another with the expectation that the market rate or price will
change such that the currency pair you have bought has appreciated
in value relative to the currency you have sold. If the currency
you have bought appreciates in value and you close your open position
by selling this currency, or effectively buying the currency that
you originally sold, then you are locking in a profit. If the
currency depreciates in value and you close your open position
by selling this currency, or effectively buying the currency you
have sold, then you are realizing a loss.
Basic
Entry & Exit Rules:
1)
Buying a currency is equivalent
with taking a long position in that currency.
2) Selling a currency is equivalent with selling short that currency.
OPEN
TRADE: 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
an adequate amount of that currency pair to effectively close
the trade. When a trader has an open trade or position, he/she
stands to profit or lose from fluctuations in the price of that
currency pair.
CURRENY
SPREAD & DEALING RATES:
A currency exchange rate is always quoted for a currency pair.
For example, EUR/USD refers to two currencies: the Euro Dollar
and the US Dollar.
EXCHANGE
RATE: An exchange rate is simply the ratio of one currency valued
against another. The first currency is referred to as the base
currency and the second as the counter or quote currency. If buying,
an exchange rate specifies how much you have to pay in the counter
or quote currency to obtain one unit of the base currency. If
selling, the exchange rate specifies how much you get in the counter
or quote currency when selling one unit of the base currency.
A
currency exchange rate is typically given as a bid price and an
ask price. The bid price is always lower than the ask price.
The bid price represents what will be obtained in the quote currency
when selling one unit of the base currency. The ask price
represents what has to be paid in the quote currency to obtain
one unit of the base currency. The following EUR/USD price quote
is an example of bid/ask notation:
EUR/USD: .9726 / .9731
The
first component (before the slash) refers to the BID price
(what you obtain in USD when you sell EUR). In this example, the
BID price is .9726. The second component (after the slash)
is used to obtain the ASK price (what you have to pay in
EUR if you buy USD). In this example, the ASK price is
.9731.
SPREAD: The difference
between the bid and the ask price is referred to as the spread.
In the example above, the spread is .05 or 5 pips. Unlike
the EUR/USD, some currency pair quotes are carried out to the
2nd decimal place (i.e. USD/JPY may be quoted at 119.45/50), in
which case 5 pips represents a difference of .05. Although a pip
may seem small, a movement of one pip in either direction can
translate into thousands of dollars in gains or losses in the
inter-bank market.
DIRECT
RATES: Most currencies are traded directly against the US Dollar.
The market rates that are expressed for such currency pairs are
called direct rates. In most cases, the US Dollar is the base
currency pair whereby the quote currency is expressed as a certain
number of units per 1 US Dollar. For example, the following rate
USD/CAD=1.4500 indicates that 1 USD (US Dollars)= 1.4500 CAD (Canadian
Dollars).
INDIRECT RATES: For some currency pairs, the US Dollar
is not the base currency but the counter or quote currency. The
market rates that are expressed for such currency pairs are called
indirect rates. This is the case with GBP (British Pound or "Cable"),
NZD (New Zealand Dollar), EUR (Eurodollar), and AUD (Australian
Dollar). For example, the following rate GBP/USD=1.5800 indicates
that 1 GBP (British Pound)= 1.5800 USD (US Dollars).
CROSS
RATES: When one currency is traded against any currency other than
the USD, the market rate for this currency pair is called a cross
rate. Cross rate is the exchange rate between two currencies
not involving the US Dollar. Although the US dollar rates do not
appear in the final cross rate, they are usually used in the calculation
and so must be known. Trading between two non-US Dollar currencies
usually occurs by first trading one against the US Dollar and
then trading the US Dollar against the second non-US Dollar currency.
There are a few non-US Dollar currencies that are traded directly,
such as GBP/EUR or EUR/CHF.
BASE CURRENCY: The base currency for the following currency pairs is the
Euro (EUR): EUR/GBP, EUR/JPG, EUR/CHF, EUR/CAD. The base currency
used when GBP is traded against the JPY (Japanese Yen) is GBP,
hence the quotation GBP/JPY.
Spot
Deal / Market
A spot deal consists of a bilateral contract between a party delivering
a specified amount of a given currency to a counter party and
receiving a specified amount of another currency in return, based
on an agreed upon exchange rate. Delivery for spot deals occurs
within two business days of the deal date, which is referred to
as the settlement date. (The settlement date for USD/CAD is one
business day after the deal date.)
Market
Orders:
Market orders are orders that are executed immediately at the
market rate.
Limit
Orders:
Limit orders are orders that a trade should be executed (in the
future) when certain market conditions occur. There are three
types of limit orders:
1)
New Positions:
- Limit
orders: specify that a currency
pair should be traded when it reaches a certain exchange rate.
Applied when entering into a trade or position, limit orders
do not offset a current position.
2)
Current / Open Positions:
- Take-Profit
orders: are used to clear a
position by buying (or selling) the currency pair of the position
when the exchange rate reaches a specified level. Take- Profit
orders are typically used to lock in a profit. For instance,
if you are long USD/JPY at 117.42 and believe the price will
continue to rise until it reaches 120.00 but are unsure what
it will do past 120.00, placing a take-profit at 120.00 will
automatically close your position allowing you to lock in your
profit.
- Stop-Loss
orders: are used to clear a
position by buying (or selling) the currency pair of the position
when the exchange rate reaches a specified level. Stop-Loss
orders are typically used to limit any losses that might occur.
For instance, it you are long USD/JPY at 117.42 and set a stop-loss
at 117.32, your position will automatically be closed at 117.32
and you will be protected from a further price decline. Stop-Loss
orders are particularly beneficial because they allow you insurance
comfort when leaving a position open while you are no longer
actively following the markets allowing you to do other things
than watch your computer monitor all day or night.
Calculating
your Profit or loss on a Trade
Example
1:
You see that the rate for EUR/USD is 0.8517/22 and decide to sell
10,000 EUR. Your trade is executed at 0.9527.
10,000 EUR
* 0.8517= 8,517.00 USD
You sold 10,000
EUR and bought 8,517.00 USD
After you
trade, the market rate of EUR/USD decreases to EUR/USD=0.8500/05.
You then buy back 10,000 EUR at 0.8505.
10,000 EUR
*0.8505= 8,505.00 USD
You sold 10,000
EUR for 8,517 USD and bought 10,000 back for 8,505. The difference
is your profit:
9,517.00-9,505.00=
$12.00 USD
Example
2:
You
see that the rate for USD/JPY is 116.00/05 and decide to buy 10,000
USD. Your trade is executed at 116.05.
10,000 USD*116.05=
1,116,050 JPY
You bought
10,000 USD and sold 1,116,050 JPY.
The market
rate of USD/JPY falls to 115.45/50. You decide to sell back 10,000
USD at 115.50.
10,000 USD*115.50=1,155,000
JPY
You bought
10,000 USD for 116,050 JPY and sold 10,000 USD back for 1,155,000
JPY. The difference is your loss and is calculated as follows:
1,160,500-1,155,000= 5,500 JPY. Note that your loss is in JPY
and must be converted back to dollars.
To calculate
this amount in USD:
5,500 JPY/
115.50 = $48.04 USD or
5,500
*1/115.50=$48.04
(0.0087)
Understanding How Fundamentals can help your overall Market
Outlook:
If
EUR/USD = 0.9617, and you sell 10,000:
· Your base currency position is 10,000*1/0.9617 = 10,398.25 EUR
· Your quote or counter currency position is 10,000*0.9617=9,617.00
USD
Now
let’s put this terms we can all understand and absorb. Suppose
you turn on the television or read the newspaper and you read
or see that there is some political unrest in Japan due to the
lack of strong leadership in that country. If you believe that
the Yen will depreciate as a result of this turmoil, you will
have the following bias:
You
will be analyzing your real time charts with the bias that you
are looking for and uptrend in the USD and a downtrend in the
JPY. Therefore you will be bullish the US Dollar and Bearish the
Japanese Yen.
Remember
this is just added sentiment to help you put the trading odds
in your favor. We at Currencytradingsystem.com do not believe
in basing all of our entry and exit decisions on purely Fundamental
analysis. After all, the charts do not lie and any instability
or negative reaction to a specific currency will be shown on the
chart thru price and volume.
We
thank you for your time and encourage you to continue logging
on to our site as each week we will continue to provide you with
ongoing Currency education and guidance from CurrencyTradingSystem.com,
the leaders in Education for self-directed Currency Traders!
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