We are coming into summer forex trading season on foreing exchange market.Most of experienced traders would tell you that this is the worst time to trade anything and the best time to lose your forex capital.If you have been watching Forex currency movements you would probabaly notice how much they have slowed down over the past two month sand how difficult is to make any pips these summer days on forex market.
Econimic situation is not very stable this summer.It is clear that nobody really knows what next trading day may bring.Many financal businesses are off for the summer,interenet activity is slow and there are not too many people out there in their offices in front of the screens following forex market.They all having fun in the hot spots.
As a forex trader you will have to consider all those aspects to plan your summer trading with confidence.
If you wonder what happened to your system or why the other systems do not perform as good as before this is only because above reasons.Summer trading is always extremely difficult and tricky even for most experienced traders.
Maybe the time has cometo change your approach to trading for a while until they are all back [...]
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Filed under Forex by on Aug 4th, 2008. Comment.
An exchange rate is simply a score for one currency against another and represents the number of units of one currency that need to be exchanged for a single unit of another currency. The exchange rate is thus the price of one currency against another and, given the number of world currencies today, within the US alone there are literally dozens of exchange rates. Now that seems simple enough but, unfortunately, it is not quite that easy.
Quite apart from these simple exchange rates, which are sometimes referred to as ’spot’ rates, there are also a whole range of ‘trade weighted’ or ‘effective’ rates which show the movement of one currency against an average of several other currencies. There are also exchange rates which are used in markets such as the forwards markets in which delivery dates are set at some point in the future, rather than at the time of the initial transaction. In other words, there is no such thing as an exchange rate, but are in fact a series of different exchange rates depending upon the nature of the transaction.
The foreign exchange market is driven largely by supply and demand and the exchange rate between any two currencies [...]
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Filed under Forex by on Aug 1st, 2008. Comment.
Most countries have their own national currency such as the US dollar, the UK pound, the Japanese yen and the Thailand baht and these are of course necessary for making payments for goods and services within each country’s borders. However, in a world where we are traveling more and more and where countries are increasingly trading with one another, foreign currency is required to pay for cross-border sales of goods and services. This means that there must be some mechanism in place to provide access to foreign currencies, so that payments can be made in a form that is acceptable to the seller, and thus the need for a foreign exchange market (or forex market which is simply short for FOReign EXchange).
In its simplest form foreign exchange refers to money which is denominated in a currency other than your own. For example, if an individual exchanges his own currency for the currency of another nation then he acquires foreign exchange. Of course we often think of foreign exchange in terms of tourism and most of us will have traveled abroad either on holiday or for business and exchanged currency on arrival at our destination to pay hotel and restaurant bills [...]
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Filed under Forex by on Aug 1st, 2008. Comment.