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About Foreign Exchange Market
The Foreign Exchange market, also referred to as
the "Forex" or "FX" market, is the largest
financial market in the world, with a daily
average turnover of well over US$1 trillion --
30 times larger than the combined volume of all
U.S. equity markets. "Foreign Exchange" is the
simultaneous buying of one currency and selling
of another. There are two reasons to buy and
sell currencies. About 5% of daily turnover is
from companies and governments that buy or sell
products and services in a foreign country or
must convert profits made in foreign currencies
into their domestic currency. The other 95% is
trading for profit, or speculation. For
speculators, the best trading opportunities are
with the most commonly traded (and therefore
most liquid) currencies, called "the Majors."
Today, more than 85% of all daily transactions
involve trading of the Majors, which include the
US Dollar, Japanese Yen, Euro, British Pound,
Swiss Franc, Canadian Dollar and Australian
Dollar. A true 24-hour market, Forex trading
begins each day in Sydney, and moves around the
globe as the business day begins in each
financial center, first to Tokyo, London, and
New York. Unlike any other financial market,
investors can respond to currency fluctuations
caused by economic, social and political events
at the time they occur - day or night. The FX
market is considered an Over The Counter (OTC)
or 'interbank' market, due to the fact that
transactions are conducted between two
counterparts over the telephone or via an
electronic network. Forex Trading is not
centralized on an exchange, as with the stock
and futures markets.
The foreign exchange market is not a "market" in
the traditional sense. There is no centralized
location for trading as there is in futures or
stocks. Trading occurs over the telephone and on
computer terminals at thousands of locations
worldwide. Foreign Exchange is also the world's
largest and deepest market. Daily market
turnover has skyrocketed from approximately 5
billion USD in 1977 to a staggering 1.5 trillion
US dollars today; even more on an active day.
Most foreign exchange activity consists of the
spot business between the US dollar and the six
major currencies (Japanese Yen, Euro, British
Pound, Swiss Franc, Canadian Dollar and
Australian Dollar) The FOREX market is so large
and is controlled by so many participants that
no one player, governments included, can
directly control the direction of the market,
which is why the FOREX market is the most
exciting market in the world. Central banks,
private banks, international corporations, money
managers and speculators all deal in FOREX
trading. |