Anyone new to the forex currency
trading market, through no
fault of his own, will have a hard time understanding what it is all
about. The forex trading market after all, is the world’s largest
financial sector, involving an average of $1.8 trillion cash value
traded per day.
The forex trading market is actually a vast market composed of
many-tiered levels and many participants. Online traders contribute only
2% of the total cash value traded. This shows just how intricate the
forex market really is.
What makes forex even more problematic is that it has
developed a jargon all on its own such that its terms are no longer what
they mean in common parlance. Although the task of understanding what
the forex market is, is overwhelming, it is not impossible.
Forex
Trading The Big Picture
A large company in South Africa ordered tons of marble from a small
company from a province in Taiwan. In the old days, the company in South
Africa would have a hard time paying for the marble as it not only would
have to ship millions of South African money to Taiwan but it would also
have to pay the small company in Taiwan in its own currency or else, the
money will be useless.
With the forex market, paying for goods and services rendered
by one country to another is no longer difficult. Through computers,
there is no longer any need to ship money. All the South African company
would have to do is to go to a bank and pay that bank in whatever
currency and that bank will transfer the amount to a bank in Taiwan
which will pay in whatever currency the small company in Taiwan wants.
For profit, the bank will ask the South African company to buy the
currency at a slightly higher price and pay the small Taiwan company
using the current exchange rate.
Forex The Small Picture
On the computer, a 21-year old jobless fresh graduate earned $10,000 in
a few months. In April, he bought Euros to try out his luck in currency
trading and to his surprise, the price of Euros soared by June and
continued to soar until December. By December, he sold all his Euros, on
a tip-off by an online friend that most of the European countries
involved in the war in Iraq will be boycotted by those countries not in
favor of the war. The tip-off was correct and in less than a month, the
Euro’s value slipped lower than its original value when this jobless
fresh graduate first bought them.
Many people have found, just like this jobless fresh graduate, how
simple it is to earn through forex currency trading. Even a dollar capital can
snowball into thousands of dollars if you know when to buy and when to
sell. Etched in stone, all forex currency traders have but one motto: buy low
and sell high. The jobless fresh graduate took a risk by buying Euros.
He held on to the currency until it gained value and, as soon as he
realized the value might lessen, he sold the currency for another.
About the Author
Hunter Crowell is a
researcher, marketer, and an avid trader, including Forex and
also the creator of
Forex Trading System a web site setup to help
educate forex traders. Visit his site at
http://www.forex-trading-systems.us
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