Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Managed Forex and its Benefits

Perhaps the simplest definition of the managed Forex is the forex that are managed using different tools and techniques either manually or using computers (most of the time using computer). Needless to say that managed Forex confers an advantage to the confused individual investor. By getting on board with the right people, you can make smart decisions, and much faster. Acquiring managed Forex makes a good deal sense given the vagaries of international trading schemas. The increasing pace of political change has crafted a strange new environment. Even Forex trading mavens are concerned about the direction of events.

As we all know, one of the main benefit of the Forex markets are they trade with sizable volumes, excellent leverage and trade 24 hours per day. The downside is they trade 24 hours per day. What this means for the average investor is it can be challenging at times being able to catch all the trades. So, when 24 hour per day is an opportunity it can be termed as biggest threat as well. Whether you live in the U.S., Europe or anywhere else internationally the fact that the Forex markets can have tradable moves sometimes outside of their usual active timeframes means that most traders are going to miss some trades.

This is where “auto trading” comes in. In a managed “auto trading” system you can set up with any established broker. This way you do not have to be placing all the trades, monitoring the markets virtually 24 hours a day, catching the directional trades, second trade re-entries and placing the limits and stops once a trade is live. In a managed “auto trading” system you are free to do other things and have someone else actually do all the relatively hard work for you.

Computers are not only intelligent but they are fatigueless as well. Computers can track that market activities and can keep you informed about the status of the market there are many software programs that create fancy charts on the computer screen according to information. Because of the invention of the Internet and other communication methods you do not need to put data manually. You can download comprehensive data after the markets close for the day.

Similarly, those with larger budgets and other infrastructure facilities can install a small satellite dish and watch price changes in all the markets nearly instantaneously as they occur. The software creates charts dynamically on the computer screen as each trade takes place on the exchanges. You can put many different charts on the screen and thus watch numerous markets all around the world in real time. Computers can let you free for other daily routine and works.

The development of computer technologies, program security and telecommunications, like experience, raises the qualification level of the brokers. In fact this raises the belief of the brokers in their own abilities to benefit and to lower the risk while operating. That’s why the higher level of the trading qualification leads to a higher level of trade amoun

FOREX Trading Tools

Whether you choose to use fundamental analysis, or technical analysis, you will need a way to access and interpret information about the market. The Internet is filled with websites that offer you unique insight into the FOREX market, and it’s often difficult to know which ones to consider. Here is a roundup of some the more useful FOREX trading tools available. Of course, these offerings are always changing, so nothing is guaranteed until you try a FOREX trading tool and find that it gives you the information you require.

The first program we’ll consider is a FOREX trading tool known as the Advanz Auto4X Trading Platform. This is an automatic execution tool that will help you keep track of multiple trades, and automates your trading processes by taking Trade Station strategy signals, incorporating your trading strategy, and sending the results to Capital’s trading platform. Advanz Auto4X can handle a variety of trading strategies on various time frames. This FOREx trading tool can also handle any of the FOREX crosses that are made available for trading.

However, the majority of FOREX trading tools available to the individual trader are analytical tools, not automatic execution tools. Here are a selection of some that I have found useful.

FOREX Pros

But one of the main FOREX pros is margin. In this market, a trader's money can play with 5-times as much value of product as a futures trader's, or 50 times more than a stock trader's.

Just like futures and stock speculation, a FOREX trader has the ability to control a large amount of currency by putting up a small amount of margin. However, the margin requirements that are needed for trading futures are usually around 5% of the full value of the holding, or 50% of the total value if you are trading stocks. One of the FOREX pros is the margin requirements for FOREX are about 1%. For example, the margin required to trade foreign exchange is $1000 for every $100,000. This can be a very profitable way to trade, but it's important to fully understand the risks that are involved.

When you trade in futures, you have to pay exchange and brokerage fees. FOREX is commission free, a much better scenario and another FOREX pro. Currency trading occurs on a worldwide inter-bank market that lets buyers be matched with sellers in an instant. But even though you do not have to pay a commission charge to a broker to be matched up with a buyer or seller, the spread is usually larger than it is when you are trading futures. And the spread is where the brokerage makes their money.

For example, if you are trading a Japanese Yen/US Dollar pair, a FOREX trade would have about a 3 point spread (worth $30). Trading a JY futures trade would likely have a spread of only 1 point (worth $10), but you would also be charged the broker's commission on top of that. This price could be as low as $10 for self-directed online trading, or as high as $50 for full-service trading. However, this is generally all-inclusive pricing. It’s a good idea to compare both online FOREX and your specific futures commission charges to see which commission is the greater one.

This may seem complicated, and frankly, it is a bit. The FOREX market is a technical market, but if you are willing to take the time to understand the workings of the market as well as the FOREx pros and apply good trading discipline, you will realize substantial profits.

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Advantages of Forex

Even in the gloomy financial outlook during the global recession we find ourselves in today, there is one market that maintains its rank as the largest market place in the entire world. Indeed, the Foreign Exchange market, or Forex for short, is the world market in the most literal sense of the word. It is here, which is everywhere, that brokers actively trade one nation’s currency for another. The advent of the Internet has made this global market accessible to anyone who can get to an internet connection and a computer. The currency market is powerful because the nature of currency is liquid. Even if the value of a nation’s currency is low due to hyperinflation or the effects of a recession or local depression, the currency in question still has value. If a currency has value, it is still worth trading, even if it is placed lower on a broker’s wish list.

To give you an idea of how large the daily volume of the Forex, look at any report on the Internet or in a financial newspaper, and you’ll find an astounding figure. The Forex markets have been in their current form and fashion only since 1973, though it had its beginnings as long ago as World War I. Today the average currency trading volume is approximately $1.5 trillion per day. Think about that figure for a moment. That is nearly 100 times the size of a typical trading day on the New York Stock Exchange of approximately $25 billion.

There are several unique advantages of the Forex in comparison to a stock exchange. The first is that minimum investment requirements for Forex broker accounts are relatively inexpensive to fund in comparison to many stock and mutual fund account minimums. Instead of a minimum of $25,000 to day trade on a stock market, with Forex you need capital as low as $250. This has made Forex trading very appealing to individual investors.

There are many other unique advantages of the Forex markets. If you are interested in learning more about the Forex markets, you will find more information on the Internet. Remember that not all investment strategies are free of risk, and the same goes for Forex trading.

Monday, December 28, 2009

History of Previous European Currency Unions

The Euro feels like a novelty - but it is not. It was preceded by quite a few Monetary Unions in Europe and outside it.

To start with, countries such as the USA and the USSR are (or were in the latter's case) monetary unions. A single currency was or is used over enormous land masses incorporating previously distinct political, social and economic entities. The American constitution, for instance, did not provide for the existence of a central bank. Founding fathers, the likes of Madison and Jefferson, objected to its existence. A central monetary institution was established only in 1791 (modelled after the Bank of England). But Madison (as President) let its concession expire in 1811. It was revived in 1816 - only to die again. It took a civil war to lead to a budding monetary union. Bank regulation and supervision were instituted only in 1863 and a distinction was made between national and state-level banks.

By that time, 1562 private banks were printing and issuing notes, some of them not a legal tender. In 1800 there were only 25. The same thing happened in the principalities which were later to constitute Germany: 25 private banks were established only between 1847 and 1857 with the express intention of printing banknotes to circulate as legal tender. In 1816 - 70 different types of currency (mostly foreign) were being used in the Rhineland alone.

A tidal wave of banking crises in 1908 led to the formation of the Federal Reserve System and 52 years were to elapse until the full monopoly of money issuance was retained by it.

What is a monetary union? Is it sufficient to have a single currency with free and guaranteed convertibility?

Two additional conditions apply: that the exchange rate be effective (realistic and, thus, not susceptible to speculative attacks) and that the members of the union adhere to one monetary policy.

Actually, history shows that the condition of a single currency, though preferable, is not a sine qua non. A union could incorporate “several currencies, fully and permanently convertible into one another at irrevocably fixed exchange rates” which is really like having a single currency with various denominations, each printed by another member of the Union. What seems to be more important is the relationship (as expressed through the exchange rate) between the Union and other economic players. The currency of the Union must be convertible to other currencies at a given (could be fluctuating - but always one) exchange rate determined by a uniform exchange rate policy. This must apply all over the territory of the single currency - otherwise, arbitrageurs will buy it in one place and sell it in another and exchange controls would have to be imposed, eliminating free convertibility and inducing panic.

This is not a theoretical - and thus unnecessary - debate. ALL monetary unions in the past failed because they allowed their currency or currencies to to be exchanged (against outside currencies) at varying rates, depending on where it was converted (in which part of the monetary union).

“Before long, all Europe, save England, will have one money”. This was written by William Bagehot, the Editor of The Economist, the renowned British magazine. Yet, it was written 120 years ago when Britain, even then, was debating whether to adopt a single European Currency.

Joining a monetary union means giving up independent monetary policy and, with it, a sizeable slice of national sovereignty. The member country can no longer control its the money supply, its inflation or interest rates, or its foreign exchange rates. Monetary policy is transferred to a central monetary authority (European Central Bank). A common currency is a transmission mechanism of economic signals (information) and expectations, often through the monetary policy. In a monetary union, fiscal profligacy of a few members, for example, often leads to the need to raise interest rates in order to pre-empt inflationary pressures. This need arises precisely because these countries share a common currency. In other words, the effects of one member's fiscal decisions are communicated to other members (through the monetary policy) because they share one currency. The currency is the medium of exchange of information regarding the present and future health of the economies involved.

Monetary unions which did not follow this course are no longer with us.

Monetary unions, as we said, are no novelty. People felt the need to create a uniform medium of exchange as early as the times of Ancient Greece and Medieval Europe. However, those early monetary unions did not bear the hallmarks of modern day unions: they did not have a central monetary authority or monetary policy, for instance.

The first truly modern example would be the monetary union of Colonial New England.

The New England colonies (Connecticut, Massachusetts Bay, New Hampshire and Rhode Island) accepted each other’s paper money as legal tender until 1750. These notes were even accepted as tax payments by the governments of the colonies. Massachusetts was a dominant economy and sustained this arrangement for almost a century. It was envy that ended this very successful arrangement: the other colonies began to print their own notes outside the realm of the union. Massachusetts bought back (redeemed) all its paper money in 1751, paying for it in silver. It instituted a mono-metalic (silver) standard and ceased to accept the paper money of the other three colonies.

The second, more important, experiment was the Latin Monetary Union. It was a purely French contraption, intended to further, cement, and augment its political prowess and monetary clout. Belgium adopted the French Franc when it attained independence in 1830. It was only natural that France and Belgium (together with Switzerland) should encourage others to join them in 1848. Italy followed in 1861 and the last ones were Greece and Bulgaria (!) in 1867. Together they formed the bimetallic currency union known as the Latin Monetary Union (LMU).

The LMU seriously flirted with Austria and Spain. The Foundation Treaty was officially signed only on 23/12/1865 in Paris.

The rules of this Union were somewhat peculiar and, in some respects, seemed to defy conventional economic wisdom.

Unofficially, the French influence extended to 18 countries which adopted the Gold Franc as their monetary basis. Four of them agreed on a gold to silver conversion rate and minted gold coins which were legal tender in all of them. They voluntarily accepted a money supply limitation which forbade them to print more than 6 Franc coins per capita (the four were: France, Belgium, Italy and Switzerland).

Officially (and really) a gold standard developed throughout Europe and included coin issuers such as Germany and the United Kingdom). Still, in the Latin Monetary Union, the quantities of gold and silver Union coins that member countries could mint was unlimited. Regardless of the quantities minted, the coins were legal tender across the Union. Smaller denomination (token) silver coins, minted in limited quantity, were legal tender only in the issuing country.

There was no single currency like the Euro. Countries maintained their national currencies (coins), but these were at parity with each other. An exchange commission of 1.25 % was charged to convert them. The tokens had a lower silver content than the Union coins.

Governmental and municipal offices were required to accept up to 100 Francs of tokens (even though they were not convertible and had a lower intrinsic value) in a single transaction. This loophole led to mass arbitrage: converting low metal content coins to buy high metal content ones.

The Union had no money supply policy or management. It was left to the market to determine how much money will be in circulation. The central banks pledged the free conversion of gold and silver to coins. But, this pledge meant that the Central Banks of the participating countries were forced to maintain a fixed ratio of exchange between the two metals (15 to 1, at the time) ignoring the prices fixed daily in the world markets.

The LMU was too negligible to influence the world prices of these two metals. The result was overvalued silver, export of silver from one member to another using ingenious and ever more devious ways of circumventing the rules of the Union. There was no choice but to suspend silver convertibility and thus acknowledge a de facto gold standard. Silver coins and tokens remained legal tender.

This became a major problem for the Union and the coup de grace was delivered by the unprecedented financing needs brought on by the First World War. The LMU was officially dismantled in 1926 - but died long before that. The lesson: a common currency is not enough - a common monetary policy monitored and enforced by a common Central Bank is required in order to sustain a monetary union.

As the LMU was being formed, in 1867, an International Monetary Conference was convened. Twenty countries participated and discussed the introduction of a global currency. They decided to adopt the gold (British, USA) standard and to allow for a transition period. They agreed to use three major “hard” currencies but to equate their gold content so as to render them completely interchangeable. Nothing came out of it - but this plan was a lot more sensible than the LMU.

One wrong path seemed to have been the Scandinavian Monetary Union.

Sweden (1873), Denmark (1873) and Norway (1875) formed the Scandinavian Monetary Union (SMU). The pattern was familiar: they accepted each others’ gold coins as legal tender in their territories. Token coins were also cross-boundary legal tender as were banknotes (1900) recognized by the banks of the member countries. It worked so perfectly that no one wanted to convert the currencies and exchange rates were not available from 1905 to 1924, when Sweden dismantled the Union following Norway's independence. Actually, the countries involved created (though not officially) what amounted to a unified central bank with unified reserves - which extended monetary credit lines to each of the member countries.

The Scandinavian Kronor held well as long as gold supply was limited. World War I changed this situation as governments dumped gold and inflated their currencies, engaging in competitive devaluations. Central Banks used the depreciated currencies to buy gold at official (cheap) rates. Sweden saw through this ploy and refused to sell its gold in the officially fixed price. The other members began to sell large quantities of the token coins to Sweden and use the proceeds to buy the much Stronger Swedish “economy” (=currency) at an ever cheaper price (as the price of gold collapsed). Sweden reacted by prohibiting the import of other members’ tokens. Without a fixed price of gold and without coin convertibility, there was no Union to talk of.

The last big (and recent) experiment in monetary union was the East African Currency Area. An equivalent experiment is still going on in the Francophile part of Africa involving the CFA currency.

The parts of East Africa ruled by the British (Kenya, Uganda and Tanganyika and, in 1936, Zanzibar) adopted in 1922 a single common currency, the East African shilling. Independence in East Africa had no monetary aspect because it remained part of the Sterling Area. This guaranteed the convertibility of the local currencies into British Pounds. Regarding this a matter of national pride (and strategic importance) the British poured inordinate amounts of money into these emerging economies. This monetary union was not disturbed by the introduction (1966) of local currencies in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania. The three currencies were legal tender in each of these countries and were all convertible to Pounds.

It was the Pound which gave way by strongly depreciating in the late 60s and early 70s. The Sterling Area was dismantled in 1972 and with it the strict monetary discipline which it imposed - explicitly and through the free convertibility - on its members. A divergence in the value of the currencies (due to different inflation targets and resulting interest rates) was inevitable. In 1977 the East African Currency Area ended.

Not all monetary unions met the same gloomy end, however. Arguably, the most famous of the successful ones is the Zollverein (German Customs Union).

At the beginning of the 19th century, there were 39 independent political units which made up the German Federation in what is today's Germany. They all minted coins (gold, silver) and had their own standards for weights and measures. Labour mobility in Europe was greatly enhanced by the decisions of the Congress of Vienna in 1815 but trade was still ineffective because of the number of different currencies.

The German statelets formed a customs union as early as 1818. This was followed by the formation of three regional groupings (the Northern, Central and Southern) which were united in 1833. In 1828, Prussia harmonized and unified its tariffs with the other members of the Federation. Debts related to customs could be paid in gold or silver. Several currencies were developed and linked to each other through fixed exchange rates. There was an over-riding single currency: the Vereinsmunze. The Zollverein (Customs Union) was established in 1834 to facilitate trade and reduce its costs. Most of the political units agreed to choose between one of two monetary standards (the Thaler and the Gulden) in 1838 and nine years later, the central bank of Prussia (which comprised 70% of the population and land mass of the future Germany) became the effective Central Bank of the Federation. The North German Thaler was fixed at 1.75 to the South German Gulden and, in 1856 (when Austria became associated with the Union), at 1.5 Austrian Florins (this was to be a short lived affair, because Prussia and Austria declared war on each other in 1866).

Germany was united by Bismarck in 1871 and a Reichsbank was founded 4 years later. It issued the Reichsmark which became the legal and only tender of the whole German Reich. The currency Union survived two world wars, a devastating bout of inflation in 1923 and a collapse of the currency after the Second World War. The Reichsmark became the solid and reliable Bundesbank. The Union still survives in the Deutschmark.

This is the only case of a monetary union which succeeded without being preceded by a political arrangement. It survived because Prussia was sizeable and had enough real power and perceived clout to enforce compliance on the other members of the Federation. Prussia wanted to have a stable currency and introduced consistent metallic standards. The other states could not deprive their currencies of their intrinsic values. For the first time in history, coinage became a professional economic decision, totally depoliticized.

In this context, we must mention another successful (on-going) union - the CFA Franc Zone.

The CFA (French African Community) is a currency used in the former French colonies of West and Central Africa (and, curiously, in one formerly Spanish colony). The currency zone has been in existence for well over three decades and comprises diverse ethnic, lingual, cultural, political and economic units. The currency withstood devaluations (the latest one of 100% vis a vis the French Franc), changes of regimes (from colonial to independent), the existence of two groups of members, each with its own central bank, controls of trade and capital flows - not to mention a host of natural and man made catastrophes. What makes it so successful is maybe the fact that the reserves of the member states are hoarded in the safes of the French Central Bank and that the currency is almost absolutely convertible to the French Franc. Convertibility is guaranteed by the French Treasury itself.

France imposes monetary discipline (that it sometimes lacks at home!) directly and through its generous financial assistance.

Europe has had more than its share of botched (the Snake, the EMS, the ERM) and of successful (ECU, the United Kingdom and Ireland) currency unifications.

A neglected one is between Belgium and Luxembourg (BENELUX is the political alignment which includes the Netherlands).

There is no real currency union here. Both maintain separate currencies. But their currencies are at parity and serve as legal tender in both countries since 1921. The Belgian Central Bank controls the monetary policies of both countries, with the exception of exchange regulations which are overseen by a joint agency. In both 1982 and 1993 the two countries considered dismantling the union - but this was not serious talk, the advantages being so numerous (especially to the smaller partner).

These three currency unions have all survived due mainly to the fact that one monetary authority has been responsible, at least de facto, for managing the currency.

What can we learn from all this (not insubstantial) cumulative experience?

(A) A dominant country is required for a Union to succeed. It must have a strong geopolitical drive and maintain political solidarity with some of the other members. It must be big, influential, and its economy must be intermeshed with the economies of the others.

(B) Central institutions must be set up to monitor and enforce fiscal and other policies, to coordinate activities of the member states, to implement political and technical decisions, to control the money aggregates and seniorage (=money printing), to determine the legal tender and the rules governing the issuance of money.

(C) It is better if a monetary union is preceded by a political one. Even so, it might prove tricky (consider the examples of the USA and of Germany).

(D) Wage and price flexibility are sine qua non. Their absence is a threat to the continued existence of any union. Fiscal policy (money transfers from rich areas to poor) are a partial remedy. They can mitigate and ameliorate problems - but not solve them. Transfers also call for a clear and consistent fiscal policy regarding taxation and expenditures. Problems like unemployment plague a rigid, sedimented union. The works of Mundell and McKinnon (optimal currency areas) prove it decisively (and separately).

(E) The last prerequisite is clear convergence criteria and monetary convergence targets.

Judging by these requirements, the current European monetary union did not sufficiently assimilate the lessons of its ill begotten predecessors. It is set in a Europe more rigid in its labour and pricing practices than 150 years ago, it was not preceded by serious political amalgamation, it relies too heavily on transfers without having in place either a coherent monetary or a consistent fiscal policy.

This monetary union is, therefore, likely to join its forefathers and remain a footnote in the annals of economic history.

History of Foreign Currency

Some of the earliest currencies can be traced back to the Middle East around 5000 years ago, these were Gold Bars and Gold Rings. In 650BC coin was first minted in Ephesus, using an alloy of Gold and Silver and these were struck with an image on one side. At this time China was also creating coin, cast from bronze and formed into more complex shapes. The early Chinese round coin with a square hole did not occur until the late 3rd century BC.

The Greeks produced the earliest European currencies, plus the concept of credit and debt, to facilitate movement around the country without needing to transport quantities of coin. As time progressed, the Romans adopted and formalised the Greek system and this has formed the basis of today’s currencies.

Paper money first occurs in China in 910AD, but because the Emperors could print it freely, major inflation occurred and it was abolished in the 15th century (history hasn’t taught us much).

Sweden introduced the first European paper notes and also the first bank. Stockholm Banco was established in 1656 and introduced a paper note which could be exchanged for a fixed value in silver coins. Again inflation destroys the system, when the banks owner; Palmstruch prints more notes than he could secure with cash. In 1667 the system collapses and he is imprisoned for fraud.

There are many further developments of paper money, all having problems until the British Government introduced the Gold standard in 1821.

International trade has always involved exchange of items of value, everything from Cowrie shells in Africa to Wampum in America. It was just a matter of attributing a common value and all has had its problems until the Gold Standard arrived.

In the early 20th Century, the Pound Stirling was the principal currency and the centre for foreign exchange was London. The Second World War saw the demise of his, with the Gold pegged $US taking over.

In 1944 the Bretton Woods Accord gave rise to two significant elements of the Foreign Currency Market, it struck an agreement whereby no other currency was allowed to fluctuate more then 1% in relation to the $US. If excessive fluctuation did occur, the central bank which controlled the fluctuating currency had to step in to stabilise it, and it gave rise to the creation of the IMF – The International Monetary Fund.

The IMF took on the role of a World Finance Legislator, producing a stable system for the sale of currencies, promotion of world trade and providing financial resources to member countries with the requirement that changes be undertaken to rectify the situations causing the need for financial assistance.

In 1978 the IMF proposed that currencies become ‘Free-Floating’, this allowed currencies to be traded freely and values determined by both supply & demand and the country of origin’s economic stability, productivity or what ever the international marketplace deemed appropriate.

In 1979 the European Monetary System was born, but the British decided to keep out of the economic conglomerate and when the Euro was adopted in 1998 as the European Currency, The British hung on to the Pound Stirling. This action gave the Forex an additional trading currency GBP. Now the Forex had EUR/GBP, GBP/USD, GBP/CHF, GBP/CAD and others, but many will notice that when comparing cross Atlantic currencies , some charts can follow very similar trends.

When currencies were free-floated in 1978 the Forex traded around US$5billion per day, at the beginning of 2009 that has risen to around US$4trillion. It is now the biggest trading market, eclipsing all the stock markets combined.

History Of Currency

It is fascinating and almost magical how money appeared on our planet. Unlike most developments we enjoy, which can be traced back to a source, civilisation or inventor, money appeared in places then unconnected all over the world in a remarkably similar way. Consider the American Indians using Wampum, West Africans trading in decorative metallic objects called Manillas and the Fijians economy based on whales teeth, some of which are still legal tender; add to that shells, amber, ivory, decorative feathers, cattle including oxen & pigs, a large number of stones including jade and quartz which have all been used for trade across the world, and we get a taste of the variety of accepted currency.

History Of Forex

In order to gain a complete understanding of what forex is, it is useful to examine the reasons that lead to its existence in the first place. Exhaustively detailing the historical events that shaped the foreign exchange market into what it is today is of no great importance to the Fx trader and therefore we will happily omit explanations of historical events such as the Bretton Woods accord in favor of a more specific insight into the reasoning behind foreign exchange as a medium of exchange of goods and services.

Originally our ancestors conducted trading of goods against other goods this system of bartering was of course quite inefficient and required lengthy negotiation and searching to be able to strike a deal. Eventually forms of metal like bronze, silver and gold came to be used in standardized sizes and later grades (purity) to facilitate the exchange of merchandise. The basis for these mediums of exchange was acceptance by the general public and practical variables like durability and storage. Eventually during the late middle ages, a variety of paper IOU started gaining popularity as an exchange medium.

The obvious advantage of carrying around 'precious' paper versus carrying around bags of precious metal was slowly recognized through the ages. Eventually stable governments adopted paper currency and backed the value of the paper with gold reserves. This came to be known as the gold standard. The Bretton Woods accord in July 1944 fixed the dollar to 35 USD per ounce and other currencies to the dollar. In 1971, president Nixon suspended the convertibility to gold and let the US dollar 'float' against other currencies.

Since then the foreign exchange market has developed into the largest market in the world with a total daily turnover of about 3.2 trillion USD. Traditionally an institutional (inter-bank) market, the popularity of online currency trading offered to the private individual is democratising forex and widening the retail market.

Forex Trading System

You can find lots of websites online which offer advice on the newest and the best trading systems that you can use in the Forex market. New traders are often fooled into purchasing these trading systems in the hope of earning more profits. Don’t make the same mistake. You have to check these trading systems before you finally decide to employ them.

The internet is full of scammers and some of the trading systems don’t really work or are fraudulent. You have to choose only the best and reliable systems. Reliable trading systems can bring in more profits if you use them consistently and in a disciplined manner.

Most Forex traders are looking for the best trading systems available online and perhaps you’re looking for it too. You have to be realistic when looking for an efficient system and so you will need to consider several factors. Some systems are very hard to understand. You must ensure that you understand the system’s logic before purchasing it. Only by understanding the logic of the system can you effectively use it to your advantage. By checking the trading system thoroughly, you will be able to determine if the whole system is intuitive and logical from your own point of view. If you think that you can stick with the trading system, knowing that its basic logic is agreeable, you can go along way.

Having a good trading system in the Forex market is vital. You must exert extra effort in your researches and conduct some trials. How can you identify a good system? A good system is one that can be used over the long-term and it has a sustained earning potential. For starters, it is advised that you have a secondary plan just in case you encounter a downturn. By doing so, you can stay afloat despite the financial struggles. You should be emotionally ready and once you earn big money, you should be wise in using or spending it.

When using a certain trading system in the Forex market, you should not expect immediate results. True enough, you can earn big money in Forex trading but there is also the possibility of losing your investment. You have to be patient and very careful in making your trading decisions. Give the system enough time to work out; for example, a couple of months to a year may be enough to determine if the system is profitable or not. Within this period, you need to ensure consistent and logical trading transactions.

Most of today’s trading systems provide near-real time Forex information but some systems only provide simulations of the logic at work based on historical data. If you think that the basic logic is understandable and solid, you can still use the system to your advantage.

The Forex market is rapidly changing or shifting. Your trading system should be able to easily adjust to these changes and shifts. Complicated systems do not guarantee better performance and it would be better to choose a system that is intuitive and user friendly. Study the major trends in the Forex market and after that, you can already choose a good trading system that can work for you. Select the system that is rational and disciplined. Don’t use your emotions when conducting the trade because it may be the start of your downfall. Get your very own trading system now and join the Forex market.

Forex Profits

Forex, FX and the Forex market are some common abbreviations for the Foreign Exchange market. Actually it is the largest financial market in the world, where money is sold and bought freely. In its present condition the Forex market was launched in the seventies, when free exchange rates were introduced, and only the participants of the market determine the price of one currency against the other proceeding from demand and supply. As far as the freedom from any external control and free competition are concerned, the Forex market is a perfect market. With a daily turnover of over trillions of dollars, the Foreign Exchange market conducts more than three times the aggregate amount volume of the United States Equity and Treasury markets combined. The Forex market is an over-the-counter market where buyers and sellers conduct foreign exchange business using different means of communication. Unlike other financial markets, the Forex market has no physical location or central exchange.

Since the Forex market lacks a physical exchange, the market trades continuously on a 24-hour basis, moving from one time zone to the next, across each of the world's major financial centers every day. Trillions of dollars of foreign exchange activity takes place every day. From 1997 to the end of 2000, daily forex trading volume surged approximately from US$5 billion to US$1.5 trillion and more (according to various recent studies it has touched $1.7 trillion per day and dwarfs all other markets for trading in size and volume). It is really difficult, if not impossible; to determine an absolutely exact number because trading is not centralized on an exchange. But one thing is for sure that the Forex market continues to grow at a phenomenal rate. Before the advent of Internet and ecommerce, only big corporations, multinational banks and wealthy individuals could trade currencies in the Forex market through the use of the proprietary trading systems of banks.

These systems required as much as US$1 million to open an account. Thanks to advancements in online technology, today investors with only a few thousand dollars can have access to the Forex market 24 hours a day and around 5 ½ days of a week. The Forex market is a nonstop cash market where currencies of nations are traded, typically via brokers called forex brokers. Foreign currencies are constantly and simultaneously bought and sold across local and global markets while traders increase or decrease value of an investment upon currency movements. Foreign exchange market conditions can change at any time in response to real-time events so it is also considered to be a highly volatile and fragile market too. Conditions of the Forex market never remain the same they changes every second. The foreign exchange market dwarfs the combined operations of the New York, London, and Tokyo futures and stock exchanges.

According to its size and scope it is many times larger than all other markets. Stats shows that spot transactions and forward outright Forex trading take place in the inter-bank market. 51% of the market is in spot Forex transactions, followed by 32% in currency swap transactions. Forward outright Forex transactions represent another 5% of this daily turnover, with options on ‘interbank' Forex transactions making up another 8%. Therefore the inter-bank market accounts for 96% of the global foreign exchange market, with the remaining 4% being divided among all the global futures exchanges. For traders, Forex trading provides an alternative to stock market trading.

While there are thousands of stocks to choose from, there are only a few major currencies to trade (the Dollar, Yen, British Pound, Swiss Franc, and the Euro are the most popular). Forex trading also provides a lot more leverage than stock trading, and the minimum investment to get started is a lot lower. Add to that the ability to choose flexible trading hours (forex trading goes on 24 hours a day) and you have the reason why so many stock traders have flocked to day trade currencies..

Automated Forex Trading

Are you a disciplined individual? According to expert Forex traders, the only ones who succeed in the Forex market are those people who stay disciplined despite their success or failure. Automated Forex trading has changed the way traders make their transactions. If you’re a savvy Forex trader, you can definitely benefit from using these automated systems.

For beginners in the Forex trade, be warned that most of the trading systems sold or offered online are considered junk and useless. Oftentimes, these systems provide tested simulations and cleverly hyped marketing strategies that do not work. By using ‘junk’ trading systems, you can lose your investment.

There are simple trading systems offered online which can yield higher returns when used properly and consistently. The simpler the automated trading system, the easier it is to use; you see, complicated systems do not guarantee success at all times so be very careful when choosing the appropriate Forex system.

For example, if you think that a certain currency is going to maintain four weeks high standing, buy it. If you have a low-standing currency, you can sell it before the price goes down further. This system is also called breakout wherein all your moves within the Forex market is based on the highs and lows. Soon, you will be able to penetrate the market’s big trends.

Big trends usually last for several weeks, months, or even years. Take a look at the Forex chart and study it. The whole system is automatic and the rules are quite objective. This system is also known as a Forex robot and it can operate fifteen minutes everyday. The creator of this Forex robot was Richard Donchian, a Forex trader.

If you want a simple system, the Forex robot may work for you. Traders who prefer complex trading systems often expect more from this system and so they would rather opt for another system which can meet their expectations. The Forex robot is not fussy and it can help you in identifying the top picks and the bottom picks.

Successful Forex traders spend enough time and effort to make informed trading decisions. As a wise trader, you should not rush things. Allow the system to work. Don’t believe in the myth that complex and expensive systems are more efficient. If you’re serious in Forex trading, you can earn lots of profits with minimal effort.

Observe today’s market trends. If you think that the Forex robot will work for you, considering the existing trends in the Forex market, you can use it because it is logical, very simple, and continuously works. the automated trading system can be obtained for free online just case you want to see how it works. If you think that the Forex robot is another junk like all other systems, check its background. Try to review ratings and testimonials to find out more about this excellent and efficient system.

The modern world is very different from that of long ago. Many of today’s basic tasks are now handled automatically. If you want an automated Forex system, you can make use of the Forex robot. Hurry and look for this system online; if you want, you can also check Richard Donchian to find more info about it. You will greatly benefit from this system over the long run. Don’t overexert yourself in studying the Forex market because with the aid of the automated system, you can go a long way.

What Is Forex

If you’ve watched any infomercials lately, you may have heard of an exciting “new” market called the forex, but the truth is, it is not a “new” market at all. The “Off Exchange Foreign Currency Market”, or forex, was initially established in 1973 as a way of tracking exchange rates between world currencies.

Although it began in 1973, it was not made available to “retail investors” until 1997 when the introduction of the internet made it more accessible to individual traders. Before 1997, participation in this market was limited to large corporations or institutions because of trading account minimums ($500,000 to $1,000,000 USD) and the high cost of data feeds from the centralized banks.

But because of the increasing demand for a system that would give the individual trader access to this potentially lucrative market, forex brokers (aka Futures Commission Merchants, FCMs) were created to act as an intermediary between liquidity providers and “retail investors”, people just like you and me, who wanted to be able to trade on their own with smaller amounts of money.

The forex is the world’s largest financial market with more than $2 TRILLION dollars traded daily. To put that in perspective, more money is exchanged in the forex in just one day than exchanged on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in ninety days! For you, that means almost unlimited opportunity.

Why the forex? According to Investopedia, a Forbes Digital Company, “…currencies benefit from some of the same things that may hurt stock indexes, bonds or commodities and can be a great way to diversify a portfolio.” So when other markets seem very uncertain (sound familiar?), diversification into the forex might be just what your portfolio needs.

Now, for some basics…

The forex is a market that is based on fluctuations in the exchange rates between pairs of currencies. For example, a rate of 1.2147 for the USD/CHF pair represents the rate of exchange between the US Dollar (USD) and the Swiss Franc (CHF). It means that 1 US Dollar is worth 1.2147 Swiss Francs. This rate is constantly changing and that creates the market. The exciting thing about the forex is that it is possible to make money as the rate goes up and as the rate goes down.

A trade is the simultaneous buying and selling of currencies. Now that may seem a little strange to you if you are familiar with other financial markets, so we won’t go into detail here, but suffice it to say that you would enter a “buy” trade if you anticipate the rate going up and you would enter a “sell” trade if you anticipate the rate going down.

Is the rate going up or down??

The truth is, nobody really knows! Some analysts will predict the rate going up while others will predict the rate going down and many sophisticated tools have been designed to assist traders in answering that very important question. The fact remains however, that it is mostly a guessing game. The key is to guess correctly more often than not so you can realize an overall increase in your account. But how?

How can you participate in the forex?

1. Trading courses: There are several companies that will teach you their methods of “guessing” the direction of the market. If this is how you choose to participate, you will likely spend several thousand dollars, and hundreds of hours, trying to learn these methods, but the sad reality is that more than 90% of people who try to “learn” to trade will FAIL. They will either give up because it is much too complicated or they will lose all of the money in their trading account. Many people who think that they will be one of the successful minority are disappointed when they find out they are not.

2. Signal Services: These services are designed so that you won’t have to do any of the trading analysis. This can be a great way to participate IF a) you are near your computer when you get the signal, and b) you don’t mind staying up all night waiting for a signal (since that is when a majority of the movements take place in the market, at least for those of us in the United States) and finally, IF the company/person providing the signal is consistent and reliable.

3. Managed Accounts: Some companies will manage your money for you and this can be a good option for some people, but be prepared to pay some fees in conjunction with this type of service:

a. Management fees: 2-3% of your account balance. As your account gets larger, so do the management fees. You pay the management fee regardless of whether the balance increases or decreases.

b. Performance fees: 15-25% of the growth in your account. If the management of the account results in a loss, however, the management company does not pay you a “non-performance” fee!

4. Expert Advisors: An Expert Advisor (EA) is a computer program that runs on a specific trading platform. The EA will place buy or sell trades based on specific parameters built into the program by the creator of the EA. There are some good reasons to use an EA as a tool for participating in the forex:

a. An EA will run 24 hours a day while the market is open, so you don’t have to watch the market or stay awake when you want to be sleeping.

b. An EA simultaneously evaluates the price data and places consistent trades based on whether or not specific parameters are met.

c. Because it is a computer program, it is not subject to the “psychology” of trading that can be the ruin of many novice, as well as experienced, traders.

While EAs can be a great tool for participating in the forex, there are also some challenges that come along with using an Expert Advisor:

a. With hundreds of EAs available for purchase, how do you choose one that will be consistent and reliable for the long term?

b. If you don’t know how to download and install a trading platform, you’ll need to learn and then modify it to run an expert advisor properly.

c. Many EAs come with installation instructions that consist of little more than a one to two page PDF file and little, to no, support.

d. Because it is a computer program, it will only run when, 1) your computer is connected to the internet, and 2) you have the trading platform running on your computer. This requires that you leave your computer running 24 hours a day while the market is open. If your power goes out or your internet connection goes down or your computer does an automatic update, it will shut down your trading platform which results in missed trades and lost profits.

At Profits to Passion, we realize that time is one thing you cannot replace, so we have designed a service that will enable you to participate in the market without the headaches and the steep learning curve. Our goal is to make your experience in this exciting market simple, consistent and profitable.

Find out more about what Profits to Passion can do for you by clicking HERE…

Author's Bio
Carole Noxon, a physicist who decided to become a stay-at-home mom, began looking for opportunities to allow her to keep her mind sharp while also working from home. What she discovered, was the Off-Exchange Foreign Currency Market, better known as the forex.

Excited by the possibilities of this new market which was just opening up to consumer traders after being exclusively in the domain of major banks, she sought out the education from one of just a few places offering this in the early days. In the following decade, she dedicated herself to becoming an expert in the field.

Visit her site today: http://www.profitstopassion.com/

Forex Automatic Systems

The most excellent way to become successful in forex trading is by the use of Forex systems. Forex automatic trading systems are dreadfully appealing. It would be extremely nice if you are capable to purchase some software program that will easily & involuntarily deal with the Forex market for you & make a killing in this procedure. Nevertheless what is the actual deal, do these Forex automatic trading systems or otherwise known as forex robots in reality work? Do they really help you to in earning money?

Forex systems bring collectively well-known & with a bit of luck gainful, trading strategies & patterns intended for trading money. A few of the forex systems have as well been created & built-in into refined Forex automatic trading systems which have trade wins over ninety five percent of the time, as well while you snooze.

You almost certainly know this however Forex systems are essential in successful trading no matter if it is developed independently in the fullness of time or procured from some other developer. Forex systems are by and large categorized into 2 types. One group is predominately a physical method wherein you build up or procure the forex system that more often than not consists of charting software program, apart from the classic Metatrader software purchased from agents.

The second category is the speedily developing Forex automatic trading systems. These forex systems as well add in loads of complex algorithms in addition to the usual chart pattern detection interrelated to definite currency pairs. These forex automatic systems identify the entry & exit criteria & consign the suitable orders, independent of somebody being present. The major advantage with your forex automatic systems is that they can trade for 24x7 days whereas this is not possible incase of a manual trader.
Both methods ought to as well take in the extremely main areas of cash & threat management. These major areas are in general incorporated into the forex automatic systems & ought to be calculated every time by the dealer in case of the manual forex systems.