Learning Center - Forex Essentials
Forex Trade
For ease of use, most
online forex trading platforms automatically
calculate the P&L of a traders' open positions.
However, it is useful to understand how this
calculation is derived.
To illustrate a typical forex trade, consider
the following example.
The current bid/ask price for USD/CHF is
1.6322/1.6327, meaning you can buy $1 US for
1.6327 Swiss Francs or sell $1 US for
1.6322.
Suppose you decide that the US Dollar (USD) is
undervalued against the Swiss Franc (CHF). To
execute this strategy, you would buy Dollars
(simultaneously selling Francs), and then wait
for the exchange rate in the
foreign exchange markets to rise.
So you make the trade: purchasing US$100,000
and selling 163,270 Francs.(Remember, at 1%
margin, your initial margin deposit would be
$1,000.)
As you expected, USD/CHF rises to 1.6435/40.
You can now sell $1 US for 1.6435 Francs or
buy $1 US for 1.6440 Francs.
Since you're long dollars (and are short
francs), you must now sell dollars and buy
back the francs to realize any profit.
You sell US$100,000 at the current USD/CHF
rate of 1.6435, and receive 164,350 CHF.
Since you originally sold (paid) 163,270 CHF,
your profit is 1080 CHF.
To calculate your P&L in terms of US
dollars, simply divide 1080 by the current
USD/CHF rate of 1.6435.
Total profit = US $657.13
Note that Off exchange foreign exchange
currencies entails significant risks. Please
ensure you invest with funds that you can
afford to lose. Past performance is not
indicative of future results. International
Foreign Currency does not guarantee any
profits or freedom of loss.
Economic indicators are snippets of
financial and economic data published by
various agencies of the government or
private sector. These statistics, which are
made public on a regularly scheduled basis,
help market observers monitor the pulse of
the economy. Therefore, they are religiously
followed by almost everyone in the financial
markets. With so many people poised to react
to the same information, economic indicators
in general have tremendous potential to
generate volume and to move prices in the
markets. While on the surface it might seem
that an advanced degree in economics would
come in handy to analyze and then trade on
the glut of information contained in these
economic indicators, a few simple guidelines
are all that is necessary to track, organize
and make trading decisions based on the
data.
Know exactly when each economic indicator is
due to be released. Keep a calendar on your
desk or trading station that contains the
date and time when each stat will be made
public. You can find these calendars on the
N.Y. Federal Reserve Bank Web site using
this link http://www.ny.frb.org/, and then
by searching for "economic indicators." The
same information is also available on many
other sources on the Web or from the company
you use to execute your trades.
Keeping track of the calendar of economic
indicators will also help you make sense out
of otherwise unanticipated price action in
the market. Consider this scenario: it's
Monday morning and the USD has been in a
tailspin for three weeks. As such, it's safe
to assume that many traders are holding
large short USD positions. However, on
Friday the employment data for the U.S. is
due to be released. It is very likely that
with this key piece of economic information
soon to be made public, the USD could
experience a short-term rally leading up to
the data on Friday as traders pare down
their short positions. The point here is
that economic indicators can effect prices
directly (following their release to the
public) or indirectly (as traders massage
their positions in anticipation of the
data).
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Understand what particular aspect of the economy
is being revealed in the data. For example, you
should know which indicators measure the growth
of the economy (GDP) vs. those that measure
inflation (PPI, CPI) or employment (non-farm
payrolls). After you follow the data for a
while, you'll become very familiar with the
nuances of each economic indicator and what part
of the economy they are measuring.
Not all economic indicators are created equal.
Well, they might've been created with equal
importance but along the way, some have acquired
much greater potential to move the markets than
others. Market participants will place higher
regard on one stat vs. another depending on the
state of the economy.