Showing posts with label Forex Trader. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Forex Trader. Show all posts

Saturday, July 14, 2012

How to Become a Forex Trader for Beginners - The Basics

Learn how to trade Forex from home and learn to trade Forex as a business. If you want to build wealth in Forex you can .Forex trading in a simple yet fun way. Watch it now and find out how to trade Forex.Example of a simple trade, what traders look for, and how you can make money of trading currencies. How to execute stop-loss and limit orders to protect profits and losses.



Know your Forex terms

Before we delve any deeper into the possibilities that exist in the Forex market, we need to go over some basic Forex market terms.

Pip: A pip (percentage in point) or point, is usually the smallest unit of measurement in the Forex market. Most currency pair quotes are carried out four decimal places—i.e. 1.4500. When you work with Alpari quotes are carried out to the 5th decimal place to provide better pricing. The 5th decimal place represents fractional pips. If the exchange rate of a currency pair moved from 1.45000 to 1.45100, we would say that the price moved up 10 pips. You make money when the pips move your way in a trade.

Note: Any exchange rate that contains the Japanese yen as one of the currencies will only be carried out three decimal places.

Currency Pair: We wouldn't have a Forex market if we weren't able to compare the value of one currency against the value of another currency. It is this comparison that drives prices. Forex contracts are always quoted in pairs. The Euro vs. the U.S. dollar (EUR/USD) is the most heavily traded currency pair. The U.S. dollar vs. the Japanese yen (USD/JPY) is another popular pair.

The following is a list of the most common currency pairs, their trading symbols and their nicknames:

Euro vs. U.S. dollar (EUR/USD): "The Euro"

Great Britain Pound vs. U.S. dollar (GBP/USD): "Pound," "Sterling," or "The Cable."

U.S. dollar vs. Swiss franc (USD/CHF): "The Swissie
U.S. dollar vs. Japanese yen (USD/JPY): "The Yen"
U.S. dollar vs. Canadian dollar (USD/CAD): "The CAD," or "Loonie"
Australian dollar vs. U.S. dollar (AUD/USD): "The Aussie"
New Zealand dollar vs. U.S. dollar (NZD/USD): "The Kiwi"

Thursday, January 20, 2011

How To Be A Better Forex Trader

NEW YORK (TheStreet) - Kathy Lien, author of "The Little Book of Currency Trading ", offers advice on trading Euros and Yen, and discusses the dangers of leverage.



Kathy Lien :".........The Japanese have not been able to weaken their currency. We're issue the Japanese yen headed.The Japanese yen doesn't really made too much based upon Japanese fundamentals it really is based on what's going on the US and it isn't that is because. Dollar yen is usually seen as a proxy for the US dollar so because I think the astonishment followed by function I think that Japanese -- to -- rise.....
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