Frustrated Trader?
Here's a Forex Primer
By Darrell Jobman, an acknowledged authority and writer on financial markets for more than 35 years*
Posted: Jan 20, 2006
Are you tired of the vagaries of stocks or the volatility of futures, such as energy or gold? If so, you might be a candidate for the largest traded “market” in the world. It’s not the U.S., Japanese or European stock markets, but the Foreign Exchange. The Foreign Exchange market is also known as Forex, FX or the cash currency market.
Speculators can and do trade this huge market, where nearly $2 trillion can change hands everyday, far exceeding the amount traded on all of the world’s stock exchanges combined. Traders and speculators in the spot market account for approximately 37 percent of the Forex activity, with another 43 percent involved in swaps and 20 percent in options and forwards.
The main function of the Foreign Exchange market is to provide the mechanism for making cross-border payments and determining exchange rates between currencies. A Forex trade is executed through the simultaneous buying of one currency and selling of another (currency pair). Although most currencies are tradable, the U.S. dollar and four other currencies account for most of the Forex trading volume: Euro ( EUR/USD), Yen (USD/JPY), British pound or cable (GBP/USD) and Swiss franc (USD/CHF) (see Figure 1).
Forex is the ideal market for experienced traders who have paid their “trading tuition” in other markets. Forex trading involves no commissions -- only point spreads measured in “pips,” equal to one-tenth of one percent (0.01%). Because the point spread in pips represents the cost of entry, it is desirable to keep it to a minimum and explains why Forex trading is concentrated in the major currency pairs, those with the tightest spreads, often as low as three or four pips.
Spot currency trading lots are typically worth $5 million to $10 million, with the minimum contract size $500,000. Smaller amounts may be traded with some firms offering minimum investments of as little as a few hundred dollars on margin far exceeding 100:1. However, this is extremely risky and, therefore, not recommended.
Technical Advantages
Of all financial instruments traded, Forex may be the best suited for technical analysis for a number of reasons:
- Forex dwarfs all other markets in trading volume. Forex trading has grown some 2,000 percent over the last three decades, rising from barely $1 billion per day in 1974 to an estimated $2 trillion by 2005, so there is plenty of turnover to produce liquidity.
Forex markets never close during the trading week, so there is no build-up or backlog of client orders overnight or pent-up reaction to news stories hitting the market at the open. This means no gaps that can create instant losses (or gains) for those holding positions overnight. The trading week begins in Sydney, Australia on Monday while it is still Sunday in North America and Europe and ends in New York on Friday afternoon, so you can trade in the middle of the night or whenever you want.- There are two basic types of markets: Trending and trading-range markets. It is far easier to make money in trending markets. Currencies tend to experience longer-lasting trends that can continue for months or even years. This makes them ideal vehicles for trend-trading and breakout systems and explains why chart pattern analysis works so well in Forex trading. With such widespread groups playing the game around the world, crowd behavior plays a large part in currency moves, and it is this crowd behavior that is the foundation for technical analysis tools and techniques.
Due in part to its size, Forex is less volatile than other markets. Lower volatility equals lower risk. For example, the S&P 500 Index trading range is between 4 percent and 5 percent daily while the daily volatility range in the Euro is closer to 1 percent.- Forex is an ideal market for the “intermarket” method of market analysis developed many years ago by respected industry professional Louis B. Mendelsohn. Trading veterans know that markets are interdependent, with some markets more heavily influenced by certain markets than others. Mendelsohn’s VantagePoint analytical software detects hidden, yet repeating, patterns that occur between related markets. By using neural networks to analyze data from a number of related markets (see Figure 2), the software projects moving averages that lead the turns in actual moving averages (see Figure 3) with a success rate of approximately 80 percent.
Don't Forget Fundamentals
Successful Forex traders, like their commodity and stock counterparts, should not forget about the fundamentals that influence the Forex market.
- Decisions are changed by interest rate announcements by central banks as well as the tone of the language in meeting minutes published following announcements or rate change.
- Government debt and deficit figures that show changes for the better or worse. Increasing deficits, for example, often portend an increase in interest rates as the government competes with the private sector for investment capital. The difference between stocks and Forex is that increasing rates are usually good news for a currency.
- Quarterly reports of gross domestic production (GDP). Preliminary national GDP announcements also have the potential to affect market sentiment.
- Economic or geopolitical events. These events include elections, armed conflicts. political uprisings, and so forth, anything that investors or traders think may destabilize or affaect the market.
- Reports. These include the Institute of Supply Management Index in the United States and the Purchasing Management Index in Europe and tend to be closely watched by traders.
- Industrial production figures, jobs (non-farm payrolls in the U.S.) and employment figures. These can affect markets, including currencies, because they could have a direct bearing on national interest rate and economic policy.
- Japanese reports. Yen traders closely follow reports, such as the Tankan quarterly survey, for insights into currency movement.
- Market sentiment surveys. Market commentators and news services publish these surveys. It is often a good idea to buy on rumor, sell on news.
Forex traders must use all of the trading tools at their disposal. The better these fundamental and technical tools are, the greater their chance for trading success. Although intermarket and other relationships are often complex and difficult to apply effectively, with a little high-tech help, traders and investors can enjoy the benefits of using them without having to scrap their existing trading methods.
*Reprinted (and modified) with permission from Darrell Jobman, Senior Market Analyst for www.TradingEducation.com, an acknowledged authority and writer on financial markets for more than 35 years
Read More Weekly Trading Education Articles.

