A Currency Markets Primer with Four Ways to Pocket a Profit
Posted on September 01, 2011 at 06:00 AM EDT
If you haven't traded in the currency markets, you're missing out on the largest financial market in the world. Average daily trading volume in the global foreign-exchange markets (forex or FX markets) was $3.98 trillion in 2010, according to the Swiss-based Bank for International Settlements , and estimates put current totals well above $4 trillion. Daily forex trading dwarfs volumes for all other leading investment vehicles - by a huge margin. Bloomberg estimates average daily trading volume for all U.S. Treasury securities at roughly $300 billion. Stocks barely register at all in comparison; average daily volume on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is just around $25 billion. Even if you combined the volume of all the world's stock exchanges, it still wouldn't equal the value of daily forex trades. One reason the forex market can be so huge is that it isn't confined to a physical location, nor does it have a central exchange. Unlike the NYSE, which has a trading floor for stocks and bonds as well as a computerized trading network, the forex market is strictly an " interbank " or " over-the-counter " enterprise. That means banks and other large currency traders can either deal directly with one another, or they can match their foreign-exchange needs via one of several Electronic Brokering Services (EBS) such as the Society for World-Wide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT). The forex markets also operate 24 hours a day, five and a half days a week - shutting down only on Saturday and early Sunday. Given the huge volumes, the bulk of currency trading is conducted by banks, Wall Street-type institutions, governments and other truly major players. However, forex markets are structured to allow fairly easy access for individual traders. This means there are trillions of dollars trading each day that you should be a part of - and here's how. To continue reading, please click here...