Getting Started in Forex Trading Strategies

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A Highly Visual Guide To Developing A Personal Forex Trading Strategy

Getting Started In Forex Trading Strategies

“A great next step to read for the beginning trader. It contains practical advice and resources on trading FOREX that only come with experience.”

-Derek Ching, President, Hawaii Forex

“We have members from over 125 countries on our Web site and plan to make Getting Started in ForexTrading Strategies a ‘…
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Getting Started in Forex Trading Strategies

Marquez’s Forex Strategies – Practical Example 1 of 2




This video demonstrates, by using practical and live trading examples showing how to follow Marquez’s forex trading strategies and transpose them to real trades.

The basics of price forecasting systems – trading, analyses and profits

Like a lot other markets, the forex trading arena is decisively driven by consumers’ supply as well as demand. Whenever there’s an astute demand for a particular currency, you will see its price to rise. At the other side of the spectrum, whenever there’s any excessive supply (even if for a short lived period of time) of a particular currency the price will fall substantially (at least enough to bring some profits or losses for traders).

On the first thought, all that seems pretty simple. But unfortunately, it is very tough to successfully or flawlessly predict movements in the prices of currencies. And that is hugely related to price forecasting
systems. Trading and profiting is greatly related to it.

Till date, there’re 2 main procedures for predicting the movements with forex markets:

1) Fundamental Analysis

2) Technical Analysis

Fundamental Analysis

Fundamental analysis had previously been a dominant tool for predicting price movements in forex markets till the mid 80s. Today, it does not remain the 1st priority choice of traders. The motto of fundamental analysis is to focus on political, social as well as economic factors that drive supply-demand. This means that the fundamental analyses are based upon things like interest rates, deflation/inflation, rate of unemployment and current growth rates within the economy. All these dissimilar indicators are utilized for assessing a particular currency’s current performance along with subsequent predictions regarding its upcoming movements.

The major limitations of fundamental analyses are that a trader must stay abreast of concurrent events for being able to realistically analyze a large chunk of data. In addition, there’s a huge debate among experts regarding which data should or shouldn’t be incorporated in the fundamental analyses. In addition, experts differ in their opinion regarding the extent of weight to assign on each and every one of those fundamental indicators.

One thing that everybody agrees upon is that a nation’s balance of payments has always been and still is the key to the internal mechanism of fundamental analysis, since it projects the money flow in the economy or out of it. Speaking theoretically, a BOP of zero is destined to produce a pretty stable price even though the BOP deficit/surplus causes the nation’s currency to fall/rise.

Technical Analysis

And here comes the modern solution for leveraging trading
systems. Trading has gotten considerable boost when traders started using technical analyses. This system is all about gauging and alerting regarding movements among currency prices. However, it makes use of historical price records/data for predicting future prices. Or at least, that is the most simplified way you can put the technical analyses used by traders in 21st century.

The core principle for technical analyses is that in almost all the instances (there are less frequent exceptions, of course) the history keeps on repeating itself. So price movements of the current date will hopefully go along well established price fluctuation patterns.

However, the 2nd principle is, there’s no need to probe current market info for predicting movements within the forex market, since this is before now reflected within the currency prices. So it’s just the price movements themselves, which deserve to be analyzed for predicting the direction of price movements.

Forex strategy –the basic understanding

Yes! You keep hearing about those tips, software application and FX experts helping you out to build the finest forex strategy. But let me tell you one big secret! To making sure you have built the most solid forex strategy, you need to understand the forex market from the deeper core. This article helps you on that by explaining some twists and curves of forex market. Enjoy!

Why forex market is a two-tier model?

To illustrate, the first tier is about the wholesale mode – you might have heard of that under a different label – interbank market. And the second tier happens to be the retail/client market. There is however 5 groups of participants in FX market:

•    International banks

•    Bank customers

•    Individual traders called “nonbank dealers”

•    FX brokers

•    Central banks

Nevertheless, it is the leviathan large international banks holding the heart of forex market. Banks worldwide (between 100 and 200) actively participate to “compose a market” international market of forex. Putting it the other way around, “they’re always on their toes” for buying or selling foreign currencies for their individual accounts. That is pretty much comparable to a specialist working hard on NYSE’s floor.

Those international banks dish up their retail clientele, large exporting/importing corporations, when it comes to foreign commerce. These banks as well help large corporations in making international investments on financial assets, which call for foreign exchange.

They have significant role to play on foreign bonds or foreign stocks. Other clientele of these large banks are MNCs, money managers, or non-bank dealers. It indeed is a huge world out there. Bank supported forex transactions amount to as much as 14% of the entire forex trading amount globally. Along those lines, the other part of trading quantity comes from Inter-bank traders – usually among international banks and/or nonbank dealers.

No wonder it’s called the biggest casino ever!

Nonbank dealers happen to be the largest non-bank/financial institutions like –

•    Investment banks

•    Mutual funds

•    Pension funds

•    Hedge funds

As you might understand, the size as well as frequency of underlying trades turns out to be super cost effective for all parties involved. And that is how they’ve been able to compose their separate dealing rooms for executing direct trades within inter-bank forex market.