Saturday, 3 November 2012

BEST FOREX SIGNALS SERVICES


 BEST FOREX SIGNALS SEForex Trading Basics
The global foreign exchange market is the biggest market in the world. The 3.2 trillion USD daily turnover dwarfs the combined turnover of all the world's stock and bond markets.

There are many reasons for the popularity of foreign exchange trading, but among the most important are the leverage available, the high liquidity 24 hours a day and the very low dealing costs associated with trading.

Of course many commercial organisations participate purely due to the currency exposures created by their import and export activities, but the main part of the turnover is accounted for by financial institutions. Investing in foreign exchange remains predominantly the domain of the big professional players in the market - funds, banks and brokers. Nevertheless, any investor with the necessary knowledge of the market's functions can benefit from the advantages stated above.

In the following article, we would like to introduce you to some of the basic concepts of foreign exchange trading. If you would like any further information, we suggest that you sign up for a FREE Membership on this website, where you will be able to exchange views with other Forex traders and get answers to any questions you might have.

Margin Trading

Foreign exchange is normally traded on margin. A relatively small deposit can control much larger positions in the market. For trading the main currencies, Saxo Bank requires a 1% margin deposit. This means that in order to trade one million dollars, you need to place just USD 10,000 by way of security.

In other words, you will have obtained a gearing of up to 100 times. This means that a change of, say 2%, in the underlying value of your trade will result in a 200% profit or loss on your deposit. See below for specific examples. As you can see, this calls for a very disciplined approach to trading as both profit opportunities and potential risks are very large indeed. Please refer to our page Forex Rates & Conditions for current Spreads, Margins and Conditions.

Base Currency and Variable Currency

When you trade, you will always trade a combination of two currencies. For example, you will buy US dollars and sell euro. Or buy euro and sell Japanese yen, or any other combination of dozens of widely traded currencies. But there is always a long (bought) and a short (sold) side to a trade, which means that you are speculating on the prospect of one of the currencies strengthening in relation to the other.

The trade currency is normally, but not always, the currency with the highest value. When trading US dollars against Singapore dollars, the normal way to trade is buying or selling a fixed amount of US dollars, i.e. USD 1,000,000. When closing the position, the opposite trade is done, again USD 1,000,000. The profit or loss will be apparent in the change of the amount of SGD credited and debited for the two transactions. In other words, your profit or loss will be denominated in SGD, which is known as the price currency. As part of our service, Saxo Bank will automatically exchange your profits and losses into your base currency if you require this.

Dealing Spread, but No Commissions

When trading foreign exchange, you are quoted a dealing spread offering you a buying and a selling level for your trade. Once you accept the offered price and receive confirmation from our dealers, the trade is done. There is no need to call an exchange floor. There are no other time-consuming delays. This is possible due to live streaming prices, which are also a great advantage in times of fast-moving markets: You can see where the market is trading and you know whether your orders are filled or not.

The dealing spread is typically 3-5 points in normal market conditions. This means that you can sell US dollars against the euro at 1.7780 and buy at 1.7785. There are no further costs, commissions or exchange fees.

This ensures that you can get in and out of your trades at very low slippage and many traders are therefore active intra-day traders, given that a typical day in USDEUR presents price swings of 150-200 points.

Spot and forward trading

When you trade foreign exchange you are normally quoted a spot price. This means that if you take no further steps, your trade will be settled after two business days. This ensures that your trades are undertaken subject to supervision by regulatory authorities for your own protection and security. If you are a commercial customer, you may need to convert the currencies for international payments. If you are an investor, you will normally want to swap your trade forward to a later date. This can be undertaken on a daily basis or for a longer period at a time. Often investors will swap their trades forward anywhere from a week or two up to several months depending on the time frame of the investment.

Although a forward trade is for a future date, the position can be closed out at any time - the closing part of the position is then swapped forward to the same future value date.

Interest Rate Differentials

Different currencies pay different interest rates. This is one of the main driving forces behind foreign exchange trends. It is inherently attractive to be a buyer of a currency that pays a high interest rate while being short a currency that has a low interest rate.

Although such interest rate differentials may not appear very large, they are of great significance in a highly leveraged position. For example, the interest rate differential between the US dollar and the Japanese yen has been approximately 5% for several years. In a position that can be supported by a 5% margin deposit, this results in a 100% profit on capital per annum when you buy the US dollar. Of course, an even more important factor normally is the relative value of the currencies, which changed 15% from low to high during 2005 – disregarding the interest rate differential. From a pure interest rate differential viewpoint, you have an advantage of 100% per annum in your favour by being long US dollar and an initial disadvantage of the same size by being short.
Please refer to our page Forex Rates & Conditions for current Spreads, Margins and Conditions!

Such a situation clearly benefits the high interest rate currency and as result, the US dollar was in a strong bull market all through 2005. But it is by no means a certainty that the currency with the higher interest rate will be strongest. If the reason for the high interest rate is runaway inflation, this may undermine confidence in the currency even more than the benefits perceived from the high interest rate.

Stop-loss discipline

As you can see from the description above, there are significant opportunities and risks in foreign exchange markets. Aggressive traders might experience profit/loss swings of 20-30% daily. This calls for strict stop-loss policies in positions that are moving against you.

Fortunately, there are no daily limits on foreign exchange trading and no restrictions on trading hours other than the weekend. This means that there will nearly always be an opportunity to react to moves in the main currency markets and a low risk of getting caught without the opportunity of getting out. Of course, the market can move very fast and a stop-loss order is by no means a guarantee of getting out at the desired level.

But the main risk is really an event over the weekend, where all markets are closed. This happens from time to time as many important political events, such as G7 meetings, are normally scheduled for weekends.

For speculative trading, we always recommend the placement of protective stop-lossorders. With Saxo Bank Internet Trading you can easily place and change such orders while watching market development graphically on your computer screen.RVICES

What Is Forex Trading


   FX (also known as foreign exchange, forex, or foreign currency) trading consists of trading one type of currency for another.
But it is more than just this. It is a market like no other with trading volumes that exceed USD$3.5 trillion on a daily basis! it is easily the world's largest financial market. Currency trading volume vastly exceeds the turnover volume on major exchanges such as the NYSE and NASDAQ! FX trading operates "over the counter" on a 24 hour 5.5 days a week through a global network of market participants that includes banks, commercial companies and brokers. The immense size and liquidity of the markets drive down the cost of trading, a compelling advantage to you, the individual trader.
Forex Tips and Tricks
Any attempt to trade without analysis and studying the market is equal to a game. Games are fun except when you lose real money...
Often people great success in the Demo Account but Fail in a real account. You must be serious in the demo and the Real. Here are some tips that we collect for you. Make sure you evaluate yourself after reading this article.
Here are our tips from successful and seasoned traders who have undergone professional Trader (trading for Living).
1. Create a trading plan and description well.
Criteria, you need to know when:
* Open position
* How many digits Stop Loss & Take Profit is ‘ideal’
* Have a financial management strategy (money management). This is related to how long you are trading in a month, how do you account resistance level of risk loss, when the attraction of funds, when adding funds, and allocation of income to savings, investment and consumption.

2. Make the trend as your best friend (Trend Follower).
Do not fight the market trend (though not including mandatory rules). If prices are rising, you can install position Buy and vice versa when prices are down then you can install Sell position. Most people often take the opposite (counter trend) and often wrong – though there’s also often true:).
3. Keep well & carefully your capital.
Do not allow your capital to be $ 0.0. If You loss, try to keep 10 to 50% of your capital, so that when the time comes to add funds or inject, Dollar that deposited not too big. Imagine if you had to add a large fund due to loss inForex trading.
If in two or three trades already spent 20 – 40% of the capital due to loss, stop for a moment. Hold yourself to open new positions. Do not obey yourself to “get even” or “want return oninvestment ”. Try to calm your mind and your head. Arrange your trading system back in the Demo Account. Spend time 3 days – 1 week to try trading system in the Demo Account.
If already established, please go back to Real Account.
4. Knowing when to dispose of “poison”.
The term poison is a Buy or Sell position that has opened that has a floating (floating position / not closed) a negative or minus position fairly large. Say if Buy GBP / USD you have -150 points in the 2-hour period, is it still worth hanging on. Or if the position of AUD / USD is minus -100 within 20 minutes, if still loved-baby??!
Ah, would’t the price back again? Well, if the price don’t back and forth, we become “poisoned” himself, both mind and body. We can be physically ill to think of a position that has not closed that reached 200 points for example. Just remember, for themoney now rather difficult times well. If It’s not productive within 2 – 3 hours, well to be amputated / Cut Loss. Cut, remove the already swollen & unproductive. What else would make the position of stay, more than one day with more expected profit well and also get a premium interest rate, put obligatory Stop Loss. Our advice, if you want to continue the next day, attach Stop Loss 200 points from the point of your open positions. Use Trailing Stop only if the facilities provided by the trading platform.
Stop Loss Plan you as early as possible. These days, the price movement to the Euro & Pound reaches 200 to 400 points per day. Determine ideal Initial Capital & Stop Loss you with a situation like that.
5. No emotion. If you’ve reached your daily or monthly targets, get out of the market. Do not be greedy.
Avoid the fear. Now it is linked with tips no.6, be informed. If you already know how far prices can move with the technical & fundamental indicators, do not look for the disease. Do not hesitate to put Stop Loss or Trailing Stop to limit losses.
6. Be smart & informed.
Smart here is no basis why should buy and why must Sell. That means you must research the market as a Fundamental and Technical. Open daily news or sites. Adjust date & time to time in which you reside.

Introduction to Trading Forex Foreign Exchange























As an additional aid for those who are new to Forex, there is also a glossary at the bottom of this text which explains some of the terms used in connection with currency trading.

Overview

Foreign exchange, Forex or just FX are all terms used to describe the trading of the world's many currencies. The Forex market is the largest market in the world, with trades amounting to more than USD 3 trillion every day. Most Forex trading is speculative, with only a low percentage of market activity representing governments' and companies' fundamental currency conversion needs.
Unlike trading on the stock market, the Forex market is not conducted by a central exchange, but on the “interbank” market, which is thought of as an OTC (over the counter) market. Trading takes place directly between the two counterparts necessary to make a trade, whether over the telephone or on electronic networks all over the world. The main centres for trading are Sydney, Tokyo, London, Frankfurt and New York. This worldwide distribution of trading centres means that the Forex market is a 24-hour market.


Trading Forex

A currency trade is the simultaneous buying of one currency and selling of another one. The currency combination used in the trade is called a cross (for example, the euro/US dollar, or the GB pound/Japanese yen.). The most commonly traded currencies are the so-called “majors” – EURUSD, USDJPY, USDCHF and GBPUSD.

The most important Forex market is the spot market as it has the largest volume. The market is called the spot market because trades are settled immediately, or “on the spot”. In practice this means two banking days.


Forward Outrights

For forward outrights, settlement on the value date selected in the trade means that even though the trade itself is carried out immediately, there is a small interest rate calculation left. The interest rate differential doesn't usually affect trade considerations unless you plan on holding a position with a large differential for a long period of time. The interest rate differential varies according to the cross you are trading. On the USDCHF, for example, the interest rate differential is quite small, whereas the differential on NOKJPY is large. This is because if you trade e.g. NOKJPY, you get almost 7% (annual) interest in Norway and close to 0% in Japan. So, if you borrow money in Japan, to finance the trade and buying NOK, you have a positive interest rate differential. This differential has to be calculated and added to your account. You can have both a positive and a negative interest rate differential, so it may work for or against you when you make a trade.


Trading on Margin

Trading on margin means that you can buy and sell assets that represent more value than the capital in your account. Forex trading is usually conducted with relatively small margin deposits. This is useful since it permits investors to exploit currency exchange rate fluctuations which tend to be very small. A margin of 1.0% means you can trade up to USD 1,000,000 even though you only have USD 10,000 in your account. A margin of 1% corresponds to a 100:1 leverage (or “gearing”). (Because USD 10,000 is 1% of USD 1,000,000.) Using this much leverage enables you to make profits very quickly, but there is also a greater risk of incurring large losses and even being completely wiped out. Therefore, it is inadvisable to maximise your leveraging as the risks can be very high. For more information on the trading conditions of Saxo Bank, go to the Account Summary on your SaxoTrader and open the section entitled “Trading Conditions” found in the top right-hand corner of the Account Summary.


Why Trade Forex?

24 hour trading

One of the major advantages of trading Forex is the opportunity to trade 24 hours a day from Sunday evening (20:00 GMT) to Friday evening (22:00 GMT). This gives you a unique opportunity to react instantly to breaking news that is affecting the markets.
Superior liquidity

The Forex market is so liquid that there are always buyers and sellers to trade with. The liquidity of this market, especially that of the major currencies, helps ensure price stability and narrow spreads. The liquidity comes mainly from banks that provide liquidity to investors, companies, institutions and other currency market players.
No commissions

The fact that Forex is often traded without commissions makes it very attractive as an investment opportunity for investors who want to deal on a frequent basis.
Trading the “majors” is also cheaper than trading other cross because of the high level of liquidity. For more information on the trading conditions of Saxo Bank, go to the Account Summary on your SaxoTrader and open the section entitled “Trading Conditions” found in the top right-hand corner of the Account Summary.
100:1 Leverage

Leverage (gearing) enables you to hold a position worth up to 100 times more than your margin deposit. For example, a USD 10,000 deposit can command positions of up to USD 1,000,000 through leverage. You can leverage the first USD 25,000 of your investment up to 100 times and additional collateral up to 50 times.
Profit potential in falling markets

Since the market is constantly moving, there are always trading opportunities, whether a currency is strengthening or weakening in relation to another currency. When you trade currencies, they literally work against each other. If the EURUSD declines, for example, it is because the US dollar gets stronger against the euro and vice versa. So, if you think the EURUSD will decline (that is, that the euro will weaken versus the dollar), you would sell EUR now and then later you buy euro back at a lower price. In case that the EURUSD indeed declines, then you can take your profit. The opposite trading scenario would occur if the EURUSD appreciates.


Important Forex Trading Terms

Spread

The spread is the difference between the price that you can sell currency at (Bid) and the price you can buy currency at (Ask). The spread on majors is usually 3 pips under normal market conditions. For more information on the trading conditions at Saxo Bank, go to the Account Summary on your Client Station and open the section entitled “Trading Conditions” found in the top right-hand corner of the Account Summary.
Pips

A pip is the smallest unit by which a cross price quote changes. When trading Forex you will often hear that there is a 3-pip spread when you trade the majors. This spread is revealed when you compare the bid and the ask price, for example EURUSD is quoted at a bid price of 0.9875 and an ask price of 0.9878. The difference is USD 0.0003, which is equal to 3 “pips”.

On a contract or position, the value of a pip can easily be calculated. You know that the EURUSD is quoted with four decimals, so all you have to do is cancel out the four zeros on the amount you trade and you will have the value of one pip. Thus, on a EURUSD 100,000 contract, one pip is USD 10. On a USDJPY 100,000 contract, one pip is equal to 1000 yen, because USDJPY is quoted with only two decimals.


Trading Scenario – Trading Rising Prices

If you believe that the euro will strengthen against the dollar you'll want to buy euro now and sell it back later at a higher price.


• You buy euro    We quote EURUSD at Bid 0.9875 and Ask 0.9878, which means that you can sell 1 euro for 0.9875 USD or buy 1 euro for 0.9878 USD.

In this example you buy euro 100,000, at the quote price of 0.9878 (ask price) per euro.

• The market moves in your favor    Later the market turns in favour of the euro and the EURUSD is now quoted at Bid 0.9894 and Ask 0.9896.

• Now you sell your euro and get the profit    You sell euro at a Bid price of 0.9894.

• The profit is calculated as follows    Sell price-buy price x size of trade
(0.9894 minus 0.9878) multiplied by 100.000 = USD 140 Profit
(Note that the profit or loss is always expressed in the secondary currency)


Trading Scenario – Trading Falling Prices

If, on the other hand, you believe that the euro will weaken against the dollar, you'll want to sell EURUSD.


• You sell euro    We quote EURUSD at a Bid price of 0.9875 and Ask price of 0.9880 and you decide to sell euro 100,000 at a Bid price of 0.9875.

• The market moves in your favour    The euro weakens against the dollar and the EURUSD is now quoted at bid 0.9744 and ask 0.9749.

• Now you buy back your euro    You buy EUR at an ask price of 0.9749.

• Your profit/loss is then    Sell price-buy price x size of trade
(0.9875 minus 0.9749) multiplied by 100.000 = USD 1260 Profit
Remember that trading EUR 100,000 as we have done in our examples, does not mean that you have to put up euro 100,000 yourself. On a 2% margin means that you have to deposit 2.0% of euro 100,000, which is euro 2,000 on margin as a guarantee for the future performance of your position.


Further Reading

To see how you can trade the Forex market and benefit from our toolbox of information and live quotes, please proceed to the Forex Quick Start found under the Trading menu of SaxoTrader.


Glossary


• Appreciation    An increase in the value of a currency.

• Ask    The price requested by the trader. This usually indicates the lowest price a seller will accept.

• Base currency    The currency that the investor buys or sells (i.e. EUR in EURUSD).

• Bear   Someone who believes prices are heading down. A bear market is one in which there has been a sustained fall in prices and which does not look like it will recover quickly.

• Bid   The price offered by the trader. This usually indicates the highest price a purchaser will pay.

• Bid/Ask   The Bid rate is the rate at which you can sell. The Ask (or offer) rate is the rate at which you can buy.

• Bull   Someone who is optimistic about the market. A bull market is characterised by enthusiastic and sustained buying.

• cross   When trading with currencies, the investor buys one currency with another. These two currencies form the cross: for example, EURUSD.

• Cross rate   An exchange rate that is calculated from two other exchange rates.

• Depreciation/decline   A fall in the value of a currency.

• Exchange rate   What one currency is worth in terms of another, for example the Australian dollar might be worth 58 US cents or 70 yen.

Currencies traded freely on foreign-exchange markets have a spot rate (applying to trades settled “spot”, i.e., two working days hence) and a forward rate. Countries can determine their exchange rates in a variety of ways.
1. A floating exchange rate system where the currency finds its own level in the market.
2. A crawling or flexible peg system which is a combination of an officially fixed rate and frequent small adjustments which in theory work against a build-up of speculation about a revaluation or devaluation.
3. A fixed exchange-rate system where the value of the currency is set by the government and/or the central bank.

• EURUSD   Means that you trade EUR against dollars. If you buy euro you pay in dollars and if you sell euro you receive dollars.

• FX, Forex, Foreign Exchange   All names for the transaction of one currency for another, e.g. you buy GBP 100.00 with USD 150.25 or sell USD 150.25 for GBP 100.00.

• Interbank   Short-term (often overnight) borrowing and lending between banks, as distinct from a banks business with their corporate clients or other financial institutions.

• Interest rate differential   The yield spread between two otherwise comparable debt instruments denominated in different currencies.

• Leverage (gearing)   The investor only funds part of the amount traded.

• Long    To buy.

• Long position    A position that increases its value if market prices increase.

• Liquid (-ity)    The capacity to be converted easily and with minimum loss into cash. A liquid market is one in which there is enough activity to satisfy both buyers and sellers. Ultra-short-dated treasury notes are an example of a liquid investment.

• Margin    The deposit required when entering into a position as well as to hold an open position. Your margin status can be monitored in the Account Summary.

• NYSE    The New York Stock Exchange.

• Open position    A position in a currency that has not yet been offset. For example, if you have bought 100,000 USDJPY, you have an open position in USDJPY until you offset it by selling 100,000 USDJPY, thus “closing” the position.

• Over the counter    When trading takes place directly between two parties, rather than on an exchange. Over the counter trades can be customised whereas exchange-traded products are often standardised.

• Pips    A pip is the smallest unit by which a Forex cross price quote changes. So if EURUSD bid is now quoted at 0.9767 and it moves up 2 pips, it will be quoted at 0.9769.

• Position    Traders talk of “taking a position” which simply means buying or selling currency cross. “Position” can also refer to a trader's cash/securities/currencies balance, whether he or she is short of cash, has money to lend, is overbought or oversold in a currency, etc.

• Risk    Trying to control outcomes to a known or predictable range of gains or losses. Risk management involves several steps which begin with a sound understanding of one's business and the exposures or risks that have to be covered to protect the value of that business. Then an assessment should be made of the types of variables that can affect the business and how best to protect against unwelcome outcomes. Consideration must also be given to the preferred risk profile – whether one is risk – averse or fairly aggressive in approach. This also involves deciding which instruments to use to manage risk and whether a natural hedge exists that can be used. Once undertaken, a risk-management strategy should be continually assessed for effectiveness and cost.

• Secondary currency (variable currency or counter currency)    The currency that the investor trades the base currency against (i.e. USD in EURUSD).

• Short position    A position that benefits from a decline in market prices.

• Short    To sell.

• Speculative    Buying and selling in the hope of making a profit, rather than doing so for some fundamental business-related need.

• Spot    A Spot rate is the current market price of an asset.

• Spot market    The part of the market calling for spot settlement of transactions. The precise meaning of “spot” will depend on local custom for a commodity, security or currency. In the UK, US and Australian foreign-exchange markets, “spot” means delivery two working days hence.



               Forex Market Update
Thursday, july, 2012, 06:24 GMT

By Andrew Timothy Robinson FX-specialist, Market Strategist, Saxo Bank

US data extends its weak run putting risk appetite on the back burner overnight

RBNZ hikes rates as expected but also dovish in accompanying statement


MAJOR HEADLINES – PREVIOUS SESSION

US Jun. Durable Goods Orders out at -1.0% m/m vs. +1.0% expected and revised -0.8% prior
US Jun. Cap. Goods Orders Non-defense, ex-Aircraft out at +0.6% m/m vs. revised +4.6% prior
NZ RBNZ hikes OCR by 25bp to 3.0%, as expected
NZ Jun. Trade Balance out at NZ$276m vs. NZ$368m expected and revised NZ$768m prior
JP Jun. Retail Trade out at +0.4% m/m, +3.2% y/y vs. 0.4%/3.2% expected and -2.0%/+2.9% prior resp.
JP Jun. Large Retailers’ Sales out at -3.0%y/y vs. -4.0% expected and revised -3.9% prior
NZ Jun. Money Supply out at y/y vs. -3.1% prior

THEMES TO WATCH – UPCOMING SESSION

(All Times GMT)

UK Nationwide House Prices (0600)
Sweden Consumer/Manufacturing Confidence (0715)
Sweden Retail Sales (0730)
GE Unemployment (0755)
UK Net Consumer Credit (0830)
UK Mortgage Approvals (0830)
UK M4 Money Supply (0830)
EU Euro-zone Business Climate Indicator (0900)
EU Euro-zone Confidence Indicators (0900)
CA Industrial Product/Raw Materials Prices (1230)
US Weekly Jobless Claims (1230)

Market Comments:

The US data releases continued their weaker trend overnight with durable goods orders falling an 1.0% m/m versus +1.0% expected, although core goods orders (non-defense goods ex-aircraft) posted 0.6% m/m gains in June and May’s data revised higher to 4.6% from 2.1%. Nevertheless, markets focused on the headline figure and Wall St stuttered in its recent rally with the DJIA losing 0.38%, S&P -0.69% and the Nasdaq -1.04%. In other data, the Fed’s beige Book showed some softer patches across the country and slowing activity in the manufacturing sector, with tame price pressures and only gradual job market improvement.

The testimony of BOE MPC members was mixed. Governor King trotted out his ultra-dove leanings saying the Bank would likely have to keep rates at low levels even if growth surprises to the upside. He, and colleague Miles, noted that small firms’ access to credit was still an issue while Fisher expected a longer lag before the steep falls in GBP of late filtered through into the economy. Charlie Bean noted inflation had surprised to the upside with the Pound’s fall having a larger feed through impact on CPI than expected, though acknowledges that this dynamic was fairly consistent with the recent past.

In currencies, GBP was knocked back a touch after the MPC testimony and the mild risk aversion theme prevented EURUSD taking out resistance (alleged option defense) at 1.3050. The weak US data knocked oil prices below $77, and data showing rising inventories did not help, and this pulled USDCAD up from the 1.03 area. Weak data and softer stocks lent support to US treasuries with a successful $37 bln 5-year auction (highest bid/cover ratio in 4 years)providing further impetus and the resultant lower yields prevented USDJPY from extending gains above 88.0 while AUD continued to be under a cloud after the weak CPI data earlier in the day.

Early this morning the RBNZ hiked its overnight cash rate by 25bp to 3.0%, as was widely expected, but in a similar vein to the Bank of Canada, was more dovish in its accompanying statement, specifically saying "The pace and extent of further OCR increases is likely to be more moderate than was projected in the June Statement." They also expressed some concerns about the Kiwi’s strength (“The New Zealand dollar has appreciated in recent weeks. This appreciation is inconsistent with the softening in New Zealand’s economic outlook and moderation in our export commodity prices”) and the Kiwi obliged with a quick 60 point fall. In tandem with the softer tone, NZ’s trade data for June showed a narrower trade surplus (NZ$276m vs. revised NZ$768m in May).

Today’s Asian session was a modest affair with a mild risk aversion strategy evident initially. However, focus soon turned to month-end demand for portfolio hedging and initial ideas are the AUD, NZD and EUR will be in demand, hence the later bid tone to those currencies. Data releases after the RBNZ were second-tier and as expected so had little impact on activity. Heading into Europe we have UK Nationwide house prices, consumer credit, mortgage approvals and money supply, Sweden’s consumer/manufacturing confidence and retail sales, German unemployment and the EU’s confidence indicators. North America has a relatively quiet session with Canada’s industrial product/raw material prices and the weekly US jobless claims on tap.


More analysis: Saxo Bank Market News & Analysis

Risk Warnings:

Saxo Bank A/S shall not be responsible for any loss arising from any investment based on any recommendation, forecast or other information herein contained. The contents of this publication should not be construed as an express or implied promise, guarantee or implication by Saxo Bank that clients will profit from the strategies herein or that losses in connection therewith can or will be limited. Trades in accordance with the recommendations in an analysis, especially leveraged investments such as foreign exchange trading and investment in derivatives, can be very speculative and may result in losses as well as profits, in particular if the conditions mentioned in the analysis do not occur as anticipated.

Carlos Hank Rhon - Importance of Learning about Forex Trading



   Forex Trading is the foreign market currency exchange trading. Here, pairs of currencies are bought and sold by investors. The base currency being the base and counter quoted. The advantage of Forex trading is that it is available all 24 hours, all days except weekends. Forex does not have corporeal or central locations, unlike the other trading industries.

The direction of Forex is undetermined or uncontrolled by the government. This is mainly due to the large numbers of traders as well as huge numbers of diverse traders. These traders may be located in various parts of the world such as New York, Japan or London. The biggest Forex traders are the financial institutes, private sectors, government, banks, corporations, etc. The whole operation may be likened to a commercial drug store where drugs may be sold or bought over the counter.

Since there is no single or group entity controlling the Forex market, Forex trading has grown to one of the largest exchange industries available. The Forex market also has the advantage of a large volume of liquidity and lower transaction expenses. The lower transaction expenses help spread the cost in the trading for Forex. It does not matter whether markets are low or high. Unlike the stock-exchange, there is always a potential to gain, irrespective of the market conditions.

WHY PRACTICE FOREX WITH MIG BANK? Because Confidence is Capital.


 


  Once you have completed the form on the right, you will be granted access to our 30 day free trading demo. You will have direct access to the demo trading environment, with no risk or obligation. You will be able to trade using the Metatrader platform, included in the welcome email, to build up your trading confidence. Because Confidence is Capital.

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Daily account statement and reporting
Automated trading using the Expert Advisor
Trailing stop featuresOnce you have completed the form on the right, you will be granted access to our 30 day free trading demo. You will have direct access to the demo trading environment, with no risk or obligation. You will be able to trade using the Metatrader platform, included in the welcome email, to build up your trading confidence. Because Confidence is Capital.

Key Benefits Include:

Swiss bank regulated by FINMA
23+ Languages Supported
70 currency pairs, spot gold & silver
100% transparent FX dealing model
ISO certificates (9001 & 27001)
WHY CHOOSE METATRADER 4?
The Market Leading Trading Platform.
The MetaTrader terminal is an award-winning, powerful and user friendly gateway to start trading forex and CFDs. Trusted by over 300 brokers worldwide, MetaTrader allows day traders and investors a reliable platform to the financial markets.

Key Features Include:

The unrivalled trading platform
User-friendly interface
Intuitive functionality and accessories
Daily account statement and reporting
Automated trading using the Expert Advisor
Trailing stop features