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Forex Introduction
Wed, Jun 28 2006, 15:38 GMT
by Andy Shearman
Trader House Network
Summary
1. Introduction
2. The players
3. The attraction for private investors
4. Five ways to trade forex
5. Margin trading: risk and reward
6. Learning to trade forex
7. Regulation and caveats
1. Introduction
The foreign exchange market owes its existence
to the 1971 abandonment of the Bretton Woods accord and the subsequent
unwinding of the regime of universal fixed exchange rates.
According to the 2001 triennial survey by the Bank of International
Settlements (BIS), global foreign exchange turnover amounts to more
than $1,200bn per day, over 50% of which is transacted on the London
market alone. Global turnover, however, is markedly down on the 1978
BIS survey figure of $1,490bn. The BIS attributes this to the launch of
the euro, banking mergers, the growth of electronic broking at the
expense of voice and telephone dealing (leading to fewer transactions)
and non-banking consolidations that have reduced the need for foreign
exchange.
2. The players
Although currency trading is inherently
governmental (central banks) and institutional (commercial and
investment banks), the foreign exchange market is also the province of
non-banking international corporations, hedge funds and individual
private investors and speculators. However, technological innovations
like the internet have made it feasible for private investors to
monitor currency markets and to trade via intermediaries.
3. The attraction for private investors
The main attractions of currency dealing to private investors are:
• 24-hour trading, 5 days a week with continuous access to global dealers
• An enormous liquid market making it easy to exchange most currencies
• Volatile markets offering profit opportunities
• Recognised instruments for controlling risk exposure
• The ability to profit in rising or falling markets
• Leveraged trading with low margin requirements
• Zero dealing commission
4. Five ways to trade forex
Private investors can trade directly or indirectly in foreign exchange through:
• the spot market
• forwards and futures
• options
• contracts for difference
• spread betting
We shall examine each of these instruments in turn, but first a risk warning.
5. Margin trading: risk and reward
All the aforementioned forex instruments are
margin products, which means that your investment exposure can be a
multiple of the cash that you lay down (i.e. the margin).
The main advantages of margin are that:
• Margin enables private investors to trade in markets with high
minimum units of trading (e.g. the spot market where the minimum size
trade is 100,000 units of the base currency).
• Margin trading enhances the rate of profit.
The principal disadvantage of margin trading is that it has the
habit of inflating rates of loss, on top of systemic risk. For example,
currency options are inherently riskier than spot market trades,
because a small change in the underlying spot rate can generate a
disproportionately large change in options prices. Sell naked call
options and there is no limit to potential losses. Add leverage to the
cocktail and you have the potential for large profits and large losses.
6. Learning to trade forex
Forex is still relatively fresh territory for
private investors, having really only been rendered feasible by the
advent of the internet. Like any financial discipline, the best
investment is a sound and practical education. To this end, TraderHouse
Network (UK) Limited has set up a training campus at the Cottesmore
Golf and Country Club near Gatwick which was featured on BBC Breakfast
News.
“We believe that hands-on training conducted by experienced
professional dealers in a live dealing environment can help newcomers
to avoid the basic but expensive errors habitually made by the
self-taught,” says TraderHouse director Andy Shearman. “We have a fully
equipped dealing room, tutors and desks for hire where you can practise
until you become proficient enough to trade independently. There has
never been a “University of Forex Trading” until now. TraderHouse fills
this learning gap”
Margin broker Easy2Trade has teamed up with TraderHouse to provide
2-day basic training programmes in forex for new accountholders at the
Cottesmore campus, where they can practise on demo accounts and benefit
from expert one-to-one supervision.
TraderHouse has also joined forces with E*Trade- www.etrade.com to
offer intensive training in all Forexand Financial markets trading and
spread-betting. As of late January 2003, TraderHouse will be holding
3-day residential training courses at the Cottesmore campus. Day two
training is conducted in a “live dealing environment” and day three in
the TraderHouse dealing room itself.
For further details, contact Andy Shearman on 01293-512211 or 07957-421769
7. Regulation and caveats
Forex trading is regulated by the Financial
Services Authority. In order to open an account with a margin broker,
applicants must demonstrate that they are intermediately experienced
investors, albeit not necessarily in forex. This may entail disclosure
of one’s investment history supported by trading statements and other
evidence. Additionally, the applicant must demonstrate an understanding
of the advantages and risks of margin trading.
Now, read on!
Published on
Wed, Jun 28 2006, 10:38 GMT
Traderhouse Network (UK)
| Cottesmore Country Club, Buchan Hill, Pease Pottage, Crawley, West Sussex, RH11 9AT
http://www.traderhouse.net | info@traderhouselate.st
Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure
NO DISCLAIMER AVAILABLE
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