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Forex Dictionary

June 24th, 2008 No comments

— A —


Accrual – The apportionment of premiums and discounts on forward exchange transactions that relate directly to deposit swap (Interest Arbitrage) deals , over the period of each deal.

Adjustment – Official action normally by either change in the internal economic policies to correct a payment imbalance or in the official currency rate or.

Appreciation – A currency is said to ‘appreciate’ when it strengthens in price in response to market demand.

Arbitrage – The purchase or sale of an instrument and simultaneous taking of an equal and opposite position in a related market, in order to take advantage of small price differentials between markets.

Ask (Offer) Price – The price at which the market is prepared to sell a specific Currency in a Foreign Exchange Contract or Cross Currency Contract. At this price, the trader can buy the base currency. In the quotation, it is shown on the right side of the quotation. For example, in the quote USD/CHF 1.4527/32, the ask price is 1.4532; meaning you can buy one US dollar for 1.4532 Swiss francs.

At Best – An instruction given to a dealer to buy or sell at the best rate that can be obtained.

At or Better – An order to deal at a specific rate or better.

— B —

Balance of Trade – The value of a country’s exports minus its imports.

Bar Chart – A type of chart which consists of four significant points: the high and the low prices, which form the vertical bar, the opening price, which is marked with a little horizontal line to the left of the bar, and the closing price, which is marked with a little horizontal line of the right of the bar.

Base Currency – The first currency in a Currency Pair. It shows how much the base currency is worth as measured against the second currency. For example, if the USD/CHF rate equals 1.6215 then one USD is worth CHF 1.6215 In the FX markets, the US Dollar is normally considered the ‘base’ currency for quotes, meaning that quotes are expressed as a unit of $1 USD per the other currency quoted in the pair. The primary exceptions to this rule are the British Pound, the Euro and the Australian Dollar.

Bear Market - A market distinguished by declining prices.

Bid Price – The bid is the price at which the market is prepared to buy a specific Currency in a Foreign Exchange Contract or Cross Currency Contract. At this price, the trader can sell the base currency. It is shown on the left side of the quotation. For example, in the quote USD/CHF 1.4527/32, the bid price is 1.4527; meaning you can sell one US dollar for 1.4527 Swiss francs.

Bid/Ask Spread – The difference between the bid and offer price. Big Figure Quote – Dealer expression referring to the first few digits of an exchange rate. These digits are often omitted in dealer quotes.. For example, a USD/JPY rate might be 117.30/117.35, but would be quoted verbally without the first three digits i.e. “30/35″.

Book – In a professional trading environment, a ‘book’ is the summary of a trader’s or desk’s total positions.

Broker – An individual or firm that acts as an intermediary, putting together buyers and sellers for a fee or commission. In contrast, a ‘dealer’ commits capital and takes one side of a position, hoping to earn a spread (profit) by closing out the position in a subsequent trade with another party.

Bretton Woods Agreement of 1944 – An agreement that established fixed foreign exchange rates for major currencies, provided for central bank intervention in the currency markets, and pegged the price of gold at US $35 per ounce. The agreement lasted until 1971, when President Nixon overturned the Bretton Woods agreement and established a floating exchange rate for the major currencies.

Bull Market - A market distinguished by rising prices.

Bundesbank – Germany’s Central Bank.

— C —

Cable – Trader jargon referring to the Sterling/US Dollar exchange rate. So called because the rate was originally transmitted via a transatlantic cable beginning in the mid 1800’s.

Candlestick Chart – A chart that indicates the trading range for the day as well as the opening and closing price. If the open price is higher than the close price, the rectangle between the open and close price is shaded. If the close price is higher than the open price, that area of the chart is not shaded.

Cash Market – The market in the actual financial instrument on which a futures or options contract is based.

Central Bank – A government or quasi-governmental organization that manages a country’s monetary policy. For example, the US central bank is the Federal Reserve, and the German central bank is the Bundesbank.

Chartist – An individual who uses charts and graphs and interprets historical data to find trends and predict future movements. Also referred to as Technical Trader.

Cleared Funds – Funds that are freely available, sent in to settle a trade.

Closed Position – Exposures in Foreign Currencies that no longer exist. The process to close a position is to sell or buy a certain amount of currency to offset an equal amount of the open position. This will ’square’ the postion.

Clearing – The process of settling a trade.

Contagion - The tendency of an economic crisis to spread from one market to another. In 1997, political instability in Indonesia caused high volatility in their domestic currency, the Rupiah. From there, the contagion spread to other Asian emerging currencies, and then to Latin America, and is now referred to as the ‘Asian Contagion’.

Collateral – Something given to secure a loan or as a guarantee of performance.

Commission – A transaction fee charged by a broker.

Confirmation – A document exchanged by counterparts to a transaction that states the terms of said transaction.

Contract- The standard unit of trading.

Counter Currency – The second listed Currency in a Currency Pair.

Counterparty – One of the participants in a financial transaction.

Country Risk – Risk associated with a cross-border transaction, including but not limited to legal and political conditions.

Cross Currency Pairs or Cross Rate – A foreign exchange transaction in which one foreign currency is traded against a second foreign currency. For example; EUR/GBP

Currency symbols
AUD – Australian Dollar
CAD – Canadian Dollar
EUR – Euro
JPY – Japanese Yen
GBP – British Pound
CHF – Swiss Franc

Currency – Any form of money issued by a government or central bank and used as legal tender and a basis for trade.

Currency Pair – The two currencies that make up a foreign exchange rate. For Example, EUR/USD

Currency Risk – the probability of an adverse change in exchange rates.

— D —

Day Trader – Speculators who take positions in commodities which are then liquidated prior to the close of the same trading day.

Dealer – An individual or firm that acts as a principal or counterpart to a transaction. Principals take one side of a position, hoping to earn a spread (profit) by closing out the position in a subsequent trade with another party. In contrast, a broker is an individual or firm that acts as an intermediary, putting together buyers and sellers for a fee or commission.

Deficit – A negative balance of trade or payments.

Delivery – An FX trade where both sides make and take actual delivery of the currencies traded.

Depreciation – A fall in the value of a currency due to market forces.

Derivative – A contract that changes in value in relation to the price movements of a related or underlying security, future or other physical instrument. An Option is the most common derivative instrument.

Devaluation – The deliberate downward adjustment of a currency’s price, normally by official announcement.

— E —

Economic Indicator – A government issued statistic that indicates current economic growth and stability. Common indicators include employment rates, Gross Domestic Product (GDP), inflation, retail sales, etc.

End Of Day Order (EOD) – An order to buy or sell at a specified price. This order remains open until the end of the trading day which is typically 5PM ET.

European Monetary Union (EMU) – The principal goal of the EMU is to establish a single European currency called the Euro, which will officially replace the national currencies of the member EU countries in 2002. On Janaury1, 1999 the transitional phase to introduce the Euro began. The Euro now exists as a banking currency and paper financial transactions and foreign exchange are made in Euros. This transition period will last for three years, at which time Euro notes an coins will enter circulation. On July 1,2002, only Euros will be legal tender for EMU participants, the national currencies of the member countries will cease to exist. The current members of the EMU are Germany, France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Austria, Finland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain and Portugal.

EURO – the currency of the European Monetary Union (EMU). A replacement for the European Currency Unit (ECU).

European Central Bank (ECB) – the Central Bank for the new European Monetary Union.

— F —

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) – The regulatory agency responsible for administering bank depository insurance in the US.

Federal Reserve (Fed) – The Central Bank for the United States.

First In First Out (FIFO) – Open positions are closed according to the FIFO accounting rule. All positions opened within a particular currency pair are liquidated in the order in which they were originally opened.

Flat/square – Dealer jargon used to describe a position that has been completely reversed, e.g. you bought $500,000 then sold $500,000, thereby creating a neutral (flat) position.

Foreign Exchange – (Forex, FX) – the simultaneous buying of one currency and selling of another.

Forward – The pre-specified exchange rate for a foreign exchange contract settling at some agreed future date, based upon the interest rate differential between the two currencies involved.

Forward Points – The pips added to or subtracted from the current exchange rate to calculate a forward price.

Fundamental Analysis – Analysis of economic and political information with the objective of determining future movements in a financial market.

Futures Contract – An obligation to exchange a good or instrument at a set price on a future date. The primary difference between a Future and a Forward is that Futures are typically traded over an exchange (Exchange- Traded Contacts – ETC), versus forwards, which are considered Over The Counter (OTC) contracts. An OTC is any contract NOT traded on an exchange.

FX – Foreign Exchange.

— G —

G7 – The seven leading industrial countries, being US , Germany, Japan, France, UK, Canada, Italy.

Going Long – The purchase of a stock, commodity, or currency for investment or speculation.

Going Short – The selling of a currency or instrument not owned by the seller.

Gross Domestic Product – Total value of a country’s output, income or expenditure produced within the country’s physical borders.

Gross National Product – Gross domestic product plus income earned from investment or work abroad.

Good ‘Til Cancelled Order (GTC) – An order to buy or sell at a specified price. This order remains open until filled or until the client cancels.

— H —


Hedge – A position or combination of positions that reduces the risk of your primary position.

“Hit the bid” – Acceptance of purchasing at the offer or selling at the bid.

— I —

Inflation – An economic condition whereby prices for consumer goods rise, eroding purchasing power.

Initial Margin – The initial deposit of collateral required to enter into a position as a guarantee on future performance.

Interbank Rates – The Foreign Exchange rates at which large international banks quote other large international banks.

Intervention – Action by a central bank to effect the value of its currency by entering the market. Concerted intervention refers to action by a number of central banks to control exchange rates.

— K —

Kiwi – Slang for the New Zealand dollar.

— L —

Leading Indicators – Statistics that are considered to predict future economic activity.

Leverage – Also called margin. The ratio of the amount used in a transaction to the required security deposit.

LIBOR – The London Inter-Bank Offered Rate. Banks use LIBOR when borrowing from another bank.

Limit order – An order with restrictions on the maximum price to be paid or the minimum price to be received. As an example, if the current price of USD/YEN is 117.00/05, then a limit order to buy USD would be at a price below 102. (ie 116.50)

Liquidation – The closing of an existing position through the execution of an offsetting transaction.

Liquidity – The ability of a market to accept large transaction with minimal to no impact on price stability.

Long position – A position that appreciates in value if market prices increase. When the base currency in the pair is bought, the position is said to be long.

Lot – A unit to measure the amount of the deal. The value of the deal always corresponds to an integer numbe

— M —

Margin – The required equity that an investor must deposit to collateralize a position.

Margin Call – A request from a broker or dealer for additional funds or other collateral to guarantee performance on a position that has moved against the customer.

Market Maker – A dealer who regularly quotes both bid and ask prices and is ready to make a two-sided market for any financial instrument.

Market Risk – Exposure to changes in market prices.

Mark-to-Market - Process of re-evaluating all open positions with the current market prices. These new values then determine margin requirements.

Maturity – The date for settlement or expiry of a financial instrument.

— N —

Net Position – The amount of currency bought or sold which have not yet been offset by opposite transactions.

— O —

Offer (ask) - The rate at which a dealer is willing to sell a currency. See Ask (offer) price

Offsetting transaction – A trade with which serves to cancel or offset some or all of the market risk of an open position.

One Cancels the Other Order (OCO) – A designation for two orders whereby one part of the two orders is executed the other is automatically cancelled.

Open order – An order that will be executed when a market moves to its designated price. Normally associated with Good ’til Cancelled Orders.

Open position – An active trade with corresponding unrealized P&L, which has not been offset by an equal and opposite deal.

Over the Counter (OTC) – Used to describe any transaction that is not conducted over an exchange.

Overnight Position – A trade that remains open until the next business day.

Order – An instruction to execute a trade at a specified rate.

— P —

Pips – The smallest unit of price for any foreign currency. Digits added to or subtracted from the fourth decimal place, i.e. 0.0001. Also called Points.

Political Risk – Exposure to changes in governmental policy which will have an adverse effect on an investor’s position.

Position – The netted total holdings of a given currency.

Premium – In the currency markets, describes the amount by which the forward or futures price exceed the spot price.

Price Transparency – Describes quotes to which every market participant has equal access.

Profit /Loss or “P/L” or Gain/Loss – The actual “realized” gain or loss resulting fromtrading activities on Closed Positions, plus the theoretical “unrealized” gain or loss on Open Positions that have been Mark-to-Market.

— Q —

Quote – An indicative market price, normally used for information purposes only.

— R —

Rally – A recovery in price after a period of decline.

Range – The difference between the highest and lowest price of a future recorded during a given trading session.

Rate – The price of one currency in terms of another, typically used for dealing purposes.

Resistance – A term used in technical analysis indicating a specific price level at which analysis concludes people will sell.

Revaluation – An increase in the exchange rate for a currency as a result of central bank intervention. Opposite of Devaluation.

Risk – Exposure to uncertain change, most often used with a negative connotation of adverse change.

Risk Management – the employment of financial analysis and trading techniques to reduce and/or control exposure to various types of risk.

Roll-Over – Process whereby the settlement of a deal is rolled forward to another value date. The cost of this process is based on the interest rate differential of the two currencies.

Round trip – Buying and selling of a specified amount of currency.

— S —

Settlement – The process by which a trade is entered into the books and records of the counterparts to a transaction. The settlement of currency trades may or may not involve the actual physical exchange of one currency for another.

Short Position – An investment position that benefits from a decline in market price. When the base currency in the pair is sold, the position is said to be short.

Spot Price – The current market price. Settlement of spot transactions usually occurs within two business days.

Spread – The difference between the bid and offer prices.

Square – Purchase and sales are in balance and thus the dealer has no open position.

Sterling – slang for British Pound.

Stop Loss Order – Order type whereby an open position is automatically liquidated at a specific price. Often used to minimize exposure to losses if the market moves against an investor’s position. As an example, if an investor is long USD at 156.27, they might wish to put in a stop loss order for 155.49, which would limit losses should the dollar depreciate, possibly below 155.49.

Support Levels – A technique used in technical analysis that indicates a specific price ceiling and floor at which a given exchange rate will automatically correct itself. Opposite of resistance.

Swap – A currency swap is the simultaneous sale and purchase of the same amount of a given currency at a forward exchange rate.

Swissy – Market slang for Swiss Franc.

— T —

Technical Analysis – An effort to forecast prices by analyzing market data, i.e. historical price trends and averages, volumes, open interest, etc.

Tick – A minimum change in price, up or down.

Tomorrow Next (Tom/Next) – Simultaneous buying and selling of a currency for delivery the following day.

Transaction Cost – the cost of buying or selling a financial instrument.

Transaction Date – The date on which a trade occurs.

Turnover – The total money value of all executed transactions in a given time period; volume.

Two-Way Price - When both a bid and offer rate is quoted for a FX transaction.

— U —

Unrealized Gain/Loss – The theoretical gain or loss on Open Positions valued at current market rates, as determined by the broker in its sole discretion. Unrealized Gains’ Losses become Profits/Losses when position is closed.

Uptick – a new price quote at a price higher than the preceding quote.

Uptick Rule – In the U.S., a regulation whereby a security may not be sold short unless the last trade prior to the short sale was at a price lower than the price at which the short sale is executed.

US Prime Rate – The interest rate at which US banks will lend to their prime corporate customers.

— V —

Value Date – The date on which counterparts to a financial transaction agree to settle their respective obligations, i.e., exchanging payments. For spot currency transactions, the value date is normally two business days forward. Also known as maturity date.

Variation Margin – Funds a broker must request from the client to have the required margin deposited. The term usually refers to additional funds that must be deposited as a result of unfavorable price movements.

Volatility (Vol) – A statistical measure of a market’s price movements over time.

— W —

Whipsaw – slang for a condition of a highly volatile market where a sharp price movement is quickly followed by a sharp reversal.

— Y —

Yard – Slang for milliard, one thousand million.

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20 Rules of Trading

June 23rd, 2008 No comments

GARTMAN’S 20 “NOT-SO-SIMPLE” RULES OF TRADING

Provided by Dennis Gartman, Editor/Publisher of The Gartman Letter

1. Never, ever under any circumstance add to a losing position…. not ever, never!. No more need be said; to do otherwise is illogical and will absolutely lead to ruin… Count on it and count on it again!

2. Trade like a mercenary guerrilla. We must fight on the winning side and be willing to change sides immediately when one side has gained the upper hand.

3. Capital comes in two varieties: Mental and Actual. Of the two types of capital, the mental is the more important and expensive of the two. Holding to losing positions costs measurable sums of actual capital, but it costs immeasurable sums of mental capital .

4. The objective is not to buy low and sell high, but to buy high and to sell higher. We can never know what price is “low.” Nor can we know what price is “high.” We can, however, have a modest, reasonable chance at knowing what the trend is and acting upon that trend.

5. In bull markets we can only be long or neutral, and in bear markets we can only be short or neutral. That may seem self-evident; it is not, however.

6. “Markets can remain illogical longer than we can remain solvent,” according to our good friend, Dr. A. Gary Shilling. Illogic often reigns and markets are enormously inefficient despite what the academics believe.

7. Sell markets that show the greatest weakness, and buy those that show the greatest strength. Metaphorically, when bearish we need to throw our rocks into the wettest paper sacks, for they break most readily. In bull markets, we need to ride upon the strongest winds… they shall carry us higher than lesser ones.

8. Try to trade the first day of a gap (either higher or lower), for gaps usually indicate violent new action. We have come to respect “gaps” in our twenty five years of watching markets; however in the world of twenty four hour trading, they are becoming less and less important, especially in forex dealing. None the less, when they happen (especially in stocks) they are usually very important.

9. Trading runs in cycles: some good; most bad. Trade large and aggressively when trading well; trade small and modestly when trading poorly. In “good times,” even errors are profitable; in “bad times” even the most well researched trades go awry. This is the nature of trading; accept it.

10. To trade successfully, think like a fundamentalist; trade like a technician. It is imperative that we understand the fundamentals driving a trade, but that we understand the market’s technicals also. When we do, then and only then can we, or should we, trade.

11. Respect “outside reversals” after extended bull or bear runs. Reversal days on the charts signal the final exhaustion of the bullish or bearish forces that drove the market previously. Respect them. Even more respect must be paid to “weekly” and “monthly,” reversals. Pay heed!

12. Keep your technical systems simple. Complicated systems breed confusion; simplicity breeds elegance.

13. Respect, expect and embrace the very normal 50-62% retracements that take prices back to major trends. If a trade is missed, wait patiently for the retracement.

14. In trading/investing, an understanding of mass psychology is often more important than an understanding of economics.. at least much, if not most, of the time.

15. Establish initial positions on strength in bull markets and on weakness in bear markets. The first “addition” should also be added on strength as the market shows the trend
to be working. Henceforth, subsequent additions are to be added on retracements.

16. Bear markets are more violent than are bull markets and so also are their retracements..

17. Be patient with winning trades; be enormously impatient with losing trades.

18. The market is the sum total of the wisdom … and the ignorance…of all of those who deal in it; and we dare not argue with the market’s wisdom. If we learn nothing more than that we have learned very much indeed.

19. Do more of that which is working and less of that which is not: If a market is strong, buy more; if a market is weak, sell more. New highs are more often then not to be bought; new lows are to be sold.

20. ALL RULES ARE MEANT TO BE BROKEN: The trick is knowing when… and how infrequently this rule may be invoked.!

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Adobe® Photoshop® CS3 Classroom in a Book®

June 20th, 2008 No comments
Image INFO: This thorough, self-paced guide to Adobe Photoshop CS3–written by the experts at Adobe Systems’ is ideal for beginning users who want to learn key Photoshop concepts and techniques, while readers who already have some experience with Photoshop can use this book to learn Photoshop CS3’s more advanced features and newest tools. Using clear, step-by-step, project-based lessons, each chapter walks readers through the creation of a specific project, with each chapter building on the reader’s growing knowledge of the program, while review questions at the end of each chapter reinforce the skills learned in each lesson. Photoshop CS3, long the industry standard for digital imaging software, offers plenty of new features and enhancements for creative professionals and digital photographers alike. Users can enjoy unrivaled editing with non-destructive Smart Filters, improved curves, and adjustable cloning and healing with Preview Overlay. Increase productivity with Photoshop CS3’s streamlined interface and new Photoshop Lightroom ” integration. Anyone who wants to create a composite will benefit from the revamped Photomerge® tool, which lets you apply automatic layer alignment and blending to your images, while the new Quick Selection tool lets you select pixels not just by color, but by texture and shape as well. And digital photographers will be pleased to know that they can now process multiple Camera Raw images in a fraction of the time it used to take. Adobe® Photoshop® CS3 Classroom in a Book® by Adobe Creative Team Pub Date: April 16, 2007 Print
ISBN-10: 0-321-49202-1
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-321-49202-9 Pages: 496
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http://rapidshare.com/files/144365930/APC.Classroom.rar
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Adobe PHOTOSHOP Tutorial – Every Tool Explained

June 18th, 2008 No comments
Image Every Tool Explained. There are 130 pages which are full of stop spamming, projects and tips on how to use Photoshop easily and how to get the best out of one of the best photo imaging programs out there. Subjects covered in the book include: Selection Tools in Photoshop: Navigating and Editing Your Images Using the Brushes and Pencil Tools Using the Cloning and Healing Tools The Gradient, Eraser and Fill Tools Getting to Know the Effects Tools Working with the Type Tool Working with Paths, Vectors and Masks Annotations, Notes and the Measure Tool Creating Top Quality Artwork
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http://rapidshare.com/files/112281221/Adobe.Photoshop_-_Every.Tool.Explained.rar
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FX Currency Trading Basics – Part 2

June 17th, 2008 No comments

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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FX Currency Trading Basics – Part 1

June 17th, 2008 2 comments

FX Currency Trading Basics – Part 1

Exchange Rates and Spreads:
All currencies are assigned an International Standards Organization (ISO) code abbreviation. In currency trading, these codes are often used to express which specific currencies make up 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.

EUR/USD
base currency/quote currency

BID/ASK PRICE: 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

EXAMPLE: 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.

When trading amounts of $1M or higher, the spread obtained in a quote is typically 5 pips. When trading smaller amounts, the spread is typically larger. For example, when trading less than $100,000, spreads of 50-200 pips are common. Credit card companies typically apply a spread of 200-300 pips. Banks and exchange bureaus typically use a spread in the range of 200-1000 pips (in addition to charging a commission). For investors and speculators, a lower or tighter spread translates into easier profit taking due to movements in exchange rates.

Buying and Selling

All trades result in the buying of one currency and the selling of another, simultaneously.

Buying (”going long”) the currency pair implies buying the first, base currency and selling an equivalent amount of the second, quote currency (to pay for the base currency). It is not necessary to own the quote currency prior to selling, as it is sold short. A trader buys a currency pair if he/she believes the base currency will go up relative to the quote currency, or equivalently that the corresponding exchange rate will go up.

Selling (”going short”) the currency pair implies selling the first, base currency, and buying the second, quote currency. A trader sells a currency pair if he/she believes the base currency will go down relative to the quote currency, or equivalently, that the quote currency will go up relative to the base currency.

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.

We thank you for your choosing the world’s leading source on currency Trading and the Forex Markets. We look forward to continuing to provide you with ongoing education and direction for most widely traded commodity today. Please stay tuned for Part two of our Special Report wich will be published next week here at www.currencytradingsystem.com. Once again we thank you for your time and remember, every day is a new day and with it, brings new opportunities.

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A brief tutorial in Forex

June 17th, 2008 No comments

Foreign exchange rates

A foreign exchange rate is the parity between two currencies i.e. the amount of one currency needed to sell (or buy) in order to buy (or sell) one unit of the other currency. There are two ways to express such a rate. The most common (or international way) quotes the amount of any currency that corresponds to one U.S.Dollar. So when we see USD/DEM at 1.5000 this means that one dollar can be exchanged for 1.5 Dmarks. Among the major currencies it is only British sterling which is quoted the other way i.e. GBP/USD at 1.5500 means that one pound is exchanged for 1.55 dollars. The American way of quoting rates uses the opposite direction, that is it expresses the dollar amount that can be exchanged for one unit of foreign currency. So when we see for example the Dmark at 0.6625 this means that one mark can be exchanged for 0.6625 dollars (or the same at 66 1/4 cents). The term «cross rate» is usually used to express the parity between two nondollar currencies like DEM/SFR.

Bid and offer

Exchange rates in practice are quoted as two-way rates. Thus a dollar/mark quotation will read something like 1.5000/10. The bank or company which quotes this rate understands that it buys marks (selling dollars) at 1.5010 and sells marks (buying dollars at 1.5000). In other words it buys cheaper and sells dearer a given currency in exchange for the other one. Of course, the opposite is true for the person that asks for a quotation. The difference between the purchase and the sale rates is called «spread». Such spreads vary in size according to market volatility.

Rate direction and currency direction

One needs to keep very clear in mind the idea of market direction. First of all, in the foreign extern market it is a mistake to say that the market is going up or down. In the stock market one can use this expression as stocks either go up or go down. However, in the FX market a rate as we said defines the parity of two currencies, hence at any time one goes up , so the other goes down. Therefore we can talk about the dollar going up or down but not about the market doing so. Another issue that often confuses people (even traders and bankers) is the difference between a currency moving up and its rate going up. We have to explain this in more detail as any misunderstanding can lead to painful surprises when trading in the real market. For simplicity reasons let us forget for the time being the bid/offer spread. So let us suppose that dollar/mark moves from 1.5000 to 1.5010. In this case the rate goes up whereas the value of the mark goes down (simply because the value of the dollar goes up). In other words one needs more marks at 1.5010 to exchange for one dollar.

Basis points or pips

A foreign exchange rate usually consists of an integer part and 4 decimal points (or 2 decimal points when expressed per 100 units like e.g. dollar/yen). Thus the decimals are expressed either at 10th thousands or hundreds. Each such 0.0001 or 0.01 is called basis point or pip. E.g. a 50 pips change of 1.5000 is either 1.5050 or 1.4950.

Spot and forward rates

To some people these concepts are more easily understood as cash rates and futures. As a matter of fact we would not like to use the term «futures» here as this may lead to confusion with the typical futures contracts. Instead, let us use a more descriptive approach. A spot rate is the exchange rate which is valid for a transaction (purchase of currency A and sale of currency B) that must be concluded within the next two working days. Thus the value date (i.e. the day of actual delivery of currencies) of a transaction performed on a Monday is Wednesday. For Thursday it is Monday (weekend days are not counted). On the other hand, a forward transaction regards a deal which is concluded today and actual effect will take place on a fixed future date In the next paragraph we describe the relationship between a spot and a forward rate.

Interest rates, swap rates and forward rates

Many people, even in the financial sector think that a forward rate is an expectation or forecast of a future foreign exchange movement. This is a big mistake. Actually, a forward rate is nothing else but a mirror of the currently prevailing spot rate, allowing for the interest rate differential between the two currencies and the time period at the expiration of which the actual transaction will be concluded. So the spot rate is adjusted by the so called swap rate to give the forward rate. For the unsophisticated investor it is enough to say that the swap rate is there to compensate the low interest currency holder for the time period involved in a forward transaction. The best way to explain these strange sounding terms is an example. We shall keep the simplistic approach and will not get involved here with FX rate spreads and interes rate spreads. Suppose person X buys $ 100,000 against Dmarks from bank B at spot rate 1.5000 for value 30 days forward. Furthermore let us assume that the dollar interest rate for this period is 5% and for the mark 3%. This means that during these 30 days A will earn interest on the marks he keeps until delivery and B will earn interest on the dollars for the same reason. The forward rate must allow for the compensation of A so that on balance no party is better or worse off. Investor A will receive interest in marks= (150,000×3x30)/36,000 = 375. On the other hand bank B will receive interest in dollars = (100,000×5x30)/36,000 = 416.67. This dollar amount calculated by prevailing spot rate 1.5000 is equivalent to 625 marks. It is evident that bank B has to compensate investor A through the forward rate, i.e. A will pay a lower price for the dollars he is buying forward to equalise the difference of 250 marks. Through a formula we can reach the swap rate 0.0025 This is subtracted from 1.5000 and the forward rate 1.4975 prevails. Indeed, the investor will finally deliver 149,750 marks to receive 100,000 dollars.

The need for a forward market

The actual need for the existence of a foreign market is not speculation, although as we explain in another article (see Why get involved in the foreign exchange market) today there is no clear-cut line between hedging and speculating. However, there are a couple of characteristic categories of people who use the forward market in order to cover for time lags. The first group includes exporters and importers. As receipts and payments do not usually coincide timewise, these people buy forward the currency that they will have to pay and sell forward the currency that they will receive. In this way they overcome undesirable market fluctuations and take care of future cash flows. The second group consists of people who use the forward market to preserve the value and nature of their assets without speculating against future trends. These operators use both the spot and forward market through swaps, which are explained below.

Swaps

A swap transaction (not to be confused with the swap rate) is a double-leg deal, in which one buys spot currency X selling currency Y and simultaneously sells forward currency X buying currency Y. Let us give an example to show the rational of such a transaction. Assume that an American investor has a future receipt in Dmarks. In addition, assume that he thinks that German bonds are presently a good investment. So he has dollar assets but does not hold cash in marks. In plain words he needs marks right now and cannot wait for the future receipt marks to come. One solution would be to sell dollars and buy marks in the spot market. However, suppose he does not wish in a foreign exchange adventure for he cannot forecast the exchange value of the future receipt. In this case he sells dollars against marks spot getting his marks and buying his bonds. Simultaneously he buys dollars forward against marks matching the value date of the receipt. Upon expiration of the forward period, the investor cashes the receipt, pays back the marks that he owes and gets his original dollars. Hence he has been able to overcome the time lag problem.

FX market and Money market

The last issue to be discussed in this brief walk is the non-difference between two markets that are the flip side of each other. We have already mentioned earlier that a swap rate is basically based on interest rate differentials. We have also explained in the previous paragraph the nature of a swap transaction. The investor who uses marks bought in the forward market to buy German bonds has another option. He can place his dollars on deposit and borrow from the bank the marks he needs.Hence, he will have a dollar deposit and a mark loan. Indeed, the interest between what he gets and what he pays is also expressed through the swap rate Therefore, both ways lead to the same result. The only advantage going though the foreign exchange market rather than through the money market is simplicity i.e. usually it is faster and easier to obtain an FX facility rather than obtaining a loan, even one based on a collaterilised deposit.

Source : www.trendwaysfin.com

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Forex Trading Strategy

June 11th, 2008 1 comment
If you want to earn profit in Forex Trading then you should be able to find,

1: Exact entry point as early as possible.

2: Exit point as early as possible.

Here I am going to discuss about a system which will give you exact entry point. This is not a Day trading system. Plan to be in positions for multiple days and possibly up to or more than 2 weeks. The goal is to build profitable positions, protect them (with Stop losses) and add more positions simultaneously while keeping your initial risk the same.

I trade the 4 hour and Daily Forex Charts based on momentum. After trial and error ( Research n Development) on short term (5min, 15 min, 1hr etc) Forex charts I’ve found the 4 hour and Daily Forex charts are best for this Forex trading Strategy.

In this Forex trading system we are going to use,

1: 150 SMA (Simple Moving Average)
2: Slow Stochastic Oscillator with settings 6, 3, 3
3: RSI (Relative Strength Indicator) with setting 3
4: Parabolic SAR with default settings (0.02, 0.2)
5: Any currency with Daily Time frame

Before continue you should know how these Forex indicator works, Please Visit Here for more details about Forex Technical Indicators.

Now take a look at blow picture, it is GBP/JPY daily forex chart, this trick work very well on daily time frame therefor please use daily chart.

Now apply all Forex indicator mention above on this chart, now it will look like below chart,

Now, I am going to explain how to use these Forex indicators to find exact entry point and exit point. Now take a look at below picture.

Entry for Uptrend: when the price is above 150 SMA, RSI is below 25, Slow Stochastic is below 25 and Slow Stochastic lines crossover occur – Enter Long with a new price bar. If at least one of the conditions is not met – stay away.

Note: Don’t consider Parabolic SAR at the time of entry, we use it for Exit.

Exit for Uptrend: A stop is placed below the previous bar’s lowest price and is moved with each new price bar. OR using Slow Stochastic, RSI and Parabolic SAR – when first Stochastic lines cross above 70, RSI is above 75 and Parabolic SAR gives sell signal (i.e. RED dot above price bar).

Entry for Downtrend: when the price is below 150 SMA, RSI is above 75, Slow Stochastic is above 75 and Slow Stochastic lines crossover occur – Enter Long with a new price bar. If at least one of the conditions is not met – stay away.

Note: Don’t consider Parabolic SAR at the time of entry, we use it for Exit.

Exit for Downtrend: A stop is placed above the previous bar’s highest price and is moved with each new price bar. OR using Slow Stochastic, RSI and Parabolic SAR – when first Stochastic lines cross above 25, RSI is above 20 and Parabolic SAR gives Buy signal (i.e. RED dot below price bar).

I hope this will help you.

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Short Term Trade with good accuracy using Stochastic

June 11th, 2008 No comments
This Forex strategy is for extremely short term trades to capture small pips (20 +), but its accuracy is very good. Our trades are always depends on stochastic position over multiple time frames stochastic (15M, 1H, 4H). If you need an explanation of stochastic you will not find it here.

In this Forex strategy 4H stochastic lead our entry and entry will depend on 15M stochastic.

Here we are going to use elasticity concept. This occurs when 15M Stochastic stretches away from the other 2 Stochastic (1H and 4H) and then snaps back. Here 15M Stochastic goes against the trend and then join the trend. You will understand better you will see the below example with picture.

What we require?

1: Three Forex chart with different time frame (15M, 1H, 4H) or custom stochastic indicator on 15M chart (download link is below).

2: Stochastic indicator with setting 14, 3, 3

Entry for Long:

Entry: When 4H and 1H are in uptrend, i.e. both are moving up. 4H and 1H stochastic should be above 61.8 level pointing up. Look for elasticity, if you find 15M stochastic against the 4H & 1H Stochastic then look for following condition: – In 15M Stochastic the fast stochastic line crosses above the slow stochastic line below 23.6 level. If all conditions are satisfied go for Long.

Stoploss: It depends on currency you are trading. Just look the history and find appropriate stoploss. 30 – 40 pips will be good.

Exit: When your profit target is hit or 15M Stochastic moves against you.

Example for Long: Here is 15M GBP/JPY Forex chart with modified stochastic indicator. Here thick red line is 4H stochastic (14, 3, 3), thick blue line is 1H stochastic (14, 3, 3), red and green line is 15M stochastic.
Here 4H stochastic is above 61.8 and moving up, 1H stochastic is above 61.8 and moving up. 15M stochastic forms elasticity and goes below 25 level. When 15M fast stochastic line (green) crosses 15M slow stochastic line (red) go for long.
Entry for Short:

Entry: When 4H and 1H are in downtrend, i.e. both are moving down. 4H and 1H stochastic should be below 38.2 level pointing down. Look for elasticity, if you find 15M stochastic against the 4H & 1H Stochastic then look for following condition: – In 15M Stochastic the fast stochastic line crosses below the slow stochastic line above 73.6 level. If all conditions are satisfied go for Short.

Stoploss: It depends on currency you are trading. Just look the history and find appropriate stoploss. 30 – 40 pips will be good.

Exit: When your profit target is hit or 15M Stochastic moves against you.

Example for Short: Here is 15M GBP/JPY Forex chart with modified stochastic indicator. Here thick red line is 4H stochastic (14, 3, 3), thick blue line is 1H stochastic (14, 3, 3), red and green line is 15M stochastic.

Here 4H stochastic is below 20 level and moving down, 1H stochastic is below 20 and moving down. 15M stochastic forms elasticity and goes above 73.6 level. When 15M fast stochastic line (green) crosses 15M slow stochastic line (red) go for Short.

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Reverse Stochastic with Fibonacci

June 11th, 2008 1 comment

Every Forex trader know the power of Fibonacci numbers and Stochastic in Forex Market, both are very popular and powerful indicator in the Forex market. Here we are going to combine both to make them more powerful.

What we required?

1) Two stochastic slow indicator with setting Red (14, 3, 3) and Green (5, 3, 3).
2) Fibonacci with level 200, 176.4, 161.8, 150, 138.2, 123.6, 100, 76.4, 61.8, 50, 38.2, 0, -23.6, -38.2, -50, -61.8, -76.4, -100.
3) Three different time Forex chart 30M, 1H and 4H.

Set-up (use GMT 00:00 and 24:00)
Draw Fibonacci line from the previous day’s low to the high and draw it so the level lines extend into today (Yesterday is between 0:00 GMT and 24:00 GMT). Always Fibonacci level 0 should be at low and Fibonacci level 100 should at high. Don’t consider market trend while drawing Fibonacci line, just draw from low to high.

Entry (Use 1H for identify Entry)

Long: Look for the price to break the 100 level of the Fibonacci not just touches it. At the same time both or (14, 3, 3) stochastic should be above 76.4 level. If the above conditions are fulfilled then check 30M and 4H chart and if both are above / near 76.4 then it is best. At least 4H should be above / near 76.4.

Stop for Long: Set the stop at the 50, 38.2, 23.6 or 0 level with 3-5 pips extra and add your spread in. I recommend the 23.6 level or 38.1 level but it depends on the pips involved.

Exit for Long: Always exit from long trade at breakout of 200 Fibonacci level or when stochastic 14, 3, 3 crosses back 76.4 downside.

Examlpe: Here is 1H Forex Chart

This is 30M Forex Chart

Here is 4H Forex Chart

Short: Look for the price to break the 0 level of the Fibonacci not just touches it. At the same time both or (14, 3, 3) stochastic should be below 23.6 level. If the above conditions are fulfilled the check 30M and 4H chart and if both are below / near 23.6 then it is best. At least 4H should be below / near 23.6.

Stop for Short: Set the stop at the 50, 61.8, 76.4 or 100 level with 3-5 pips extra and add your spread in. I recommend the 61.8 level or 76.4 level but it depends on the pips involved.

Exit for Short: Always exit from short trade at breakout of -100 level or when stochastic 14, 3, 3 crosses back 23.6 upside.

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