Here am going to Provide you a interesting Information to your Successful Foreign Exchange Trading keep going on this blog to find out more information's to your success in Foreign Exchange.
Kindly keep in mind the following things described in details for your SUCCESSFUL FOREIGN EXCHANGE TRADING CAREER.
And also here you can find the Meanings of the Terms most commonly used in Forex (Foreign Exchange).
so go through the posts i don't want to waste your golden time.
when you finish reading my site, i hope you must got a good idea about FOREX.
HAVE A HAPPY AND SAFE AND SUCCESSFUL TRADING.........
WISH YOU ALL SUCCESS......
June 13, 2009
How To Succeed in Forex?
June 2, 2009
COGS - Cost Of Goods Sold
What Does COGS Mean?
The direct costs attributable to the production of the goods sold by a company. This amount includes the cost of the materials used in creating the good along with the direct labor costs used to produce the good. It excludes indirect expenses such as distribution costs and sales force costs. COGS appears on the income statement and can be deducted from revenue to calculate a company's gross margin.
Also referred to as "cost of sales".
For Example Cost Of Goods Sold - COGS
COGS is the costs that go into creating the products that a company sells; therefore, the only costs included in the measure are those that are directly tied to the production of the products. For example, the COGS for an automaker would include the material costs for the parts that go into making the car along with the labor costs used to put the car together. The cost of sending the cars to dealerships and the cost of the labor used to sell the car would be excluded.
The exact costs included in the COGS calculation will differ from one type of business to another.
The cost of goods attributed to a company's products are expensed as the company sells these goods. There are several ways to calculate COGS but one of the more basic ways is to start with the beginning inventory for the period and add the total amount of purchases made during the period then deducting the ending inventory.
This calculation gives the total amount of inventory or, more specifically, the cost of this inventory, sold by the company during the period. Therefore, if a company starts with $10 million in inventory, makes $2 million in purchases and ends the period with $9 million in inventory, the company's cost of goods for the period would be $3 million ($10 million + $2 million - $9 million).
Value Investing
What Does Value Investing Mean?
The strategy of selecting stocks that trade for less than their intrinsic values. Value investors actively seek stocks of companies that they believe the market has undervalued. They believe the market overreacts to good and bad news, resulting in stock price movements that do not correspond with the company's long-term fundamentals. The result is an opportunity for value investors to profit by buying when the price is deflated.
Typically, value investors select stocks with lower-than-average price-to-book or price-to-earnings ratios and/or high dividend yields.
For Example Value Investing
The big problem for value investing is estimating intrinsic value. Remember, there is no "correct" intrinsic value. Two investors can be given the exact same information and place a different value on a company. For this reason, another central concept to value investing is that of "margin of safety". This just means that you buy at a big enough discount to allow some room for error in your estimation of value.
Also keep in mind that the very definition of value investing is subjective. Some value investors only look at present assets/earnings and don't place any value on future growth. Other value investors base strategies completely around the estimation of future growth and cash flows. Despite the different methodologies, it all comes back to trying to buy something for less than it is worth.
Buy And Hold
What Does Buy And Hold Mean?
A passive investment strategy in which an investor buys stocks and holds them for a long period of time, regardless of fluctuations in the market. An investor who employs a buy-and-hold strategy actively selects stocks, but once in a position, is not concerned with short-term price movements and technical indicators.
For Example Buy And Hold
Conventional investing wisdom tells us that with a long time horizon, equities render a higher return than other asset classes such as bonds. There is, however, a debate over whether a buy-and-hold strategy is actually superior to an active investing strategy; both sides have valid arguments. A buy-and-hold strategy has tax benefits, however, because long-term investments tend to be taxed at a lower rate than short-term investments.
Equity
What Does Equity Mean?
A stock or any other security representing an ownership interest.
On a company's balance sheet, the amount of the funds contributed by the owners (the stockholders) plus the retained earnings (or losses). Also referred to as "shareholders' equity".
In the context of margin trading, the value of securities in a margin account minus what has been borrowed from the brokerage.
In the context of real estate, the difference between the current market value of the property and the amount the owner still owes on the mortgage. It is the amount that the owner would receive after selling a property and paying off the mortgage.
In terms of investment strategies, equity (stocks) is one of the principal asset classes. The other two are fixed-income (bonds) and cash/cash-equivalents. These are used in asset allocation planning to structure a desired risk and return profile for an investor's portfolio.
For Example Equity
The term's meaning depends very much on the context. In finance, in general, you can think of equity as ownership in any asset after all debts associated with that asset are paid off. For example, a car or house with no outstanding debt is considered the owner's equity because he or she can readily sell the item for cash. Stocks are equity because they represent ownership in a company.
June 1, 2009
Other Financial Markets & Currencies in Forex
As much as we like to think of the forex market as the be all and end all of financial trading markets, it doesn’t exist in a vacuum. You may even have heard of some these other markets:
GOLD, OIL, STOCKS, AND BONDS.
There’s a fair amount of noise and misinformation about the supposed interrelationship among these markets and currencies or individual currency pairs. To be sure, you can always find a correlation between two different markets over some
period of time, even if it’s only zero (meaning, the two markets aren’t correlated at all).
Always keep in mind that all the various financial markets are markets in their own right and function according to their own internal dynamics based on data, news, positioning, and sentiment. Will markets occasionally overlap and display varying degrees of correlation? Of course, and it’s always important to be aware of what’s going on in other financial markets. But it’s also essential to view each market in its own perspective and to trade each market individually.
Let’s look at some of the other key financial markets and see what conclusions we can draw for currency trading.
Gold
Gold is commonly viewed as a hedge against inflation, an alternative to the U.S. dollar, and as a store of value in times of economic or political uncertainty. Over the long term, the relationship is mostly inverse, with a weaker USD generally
accompanying a higher gold price, and a stronger USD coming with a lower gold price. However, in the short run, each market has its own dynamics and liquidity, which makes short-term trading relationships generally tenuous.
Overall, the gold market is significantly smaller than the forex market, so if we were gold traders, we’d sooner keep an eye on what’s happening to the dollar, rather than the other way around. With that noted, extreme movements in gold prices tend to attract currency traders’ attention and usually influence the dollar in a mostly inverse fashion.
Oil
A lot of misinformation exists on the Internet about the supposed relationship between oil and the USD or other currencies, such as CAD or JPY. The idea is that, because some countries are oil producers, their currencies are positively (or negatively) affected by increases (or decreases) in the price of oil.
If the country is an importer of oil (and which countries aren’t today?), the theory goes, its currency will be hurt (or helped) by higher (or lower) oil prices.
Correlation studies show no appreciable relationships to that effect, especially in the short run, which is where most currency trading is focused. When there is a long-term relationship, it’s as evident against the USD as much as, or more than,
any individual currency, whether an importer or exporter of black gold.
The best way to look at oil is as an inflation input and as a limiting factor on overall economic growth. The higher the price of oil, the higher inflation is likely to be and the slower an economy is likely to grow. The lower the price of oil, the lower inflationary pressures are likely (but not necessarily) to be.
We like to factor changes in the price of oil into our inflation and growth expectations, and then draw conclusions about the course of the USD from them. Above all, oil is just one input among many.
Stocks
Stocks are microeconomic securities, rising and falling in response to individual corporate results and prospects, while currencies are essentially macroeconomic securities, fluctuating in response to wider-ranging economic and political developments.
As such, there is little intuitive reason that stock markets should be related to currencies. Long-term correlation studies bear this out, with correlation coefficients of essentially zero between the major USD pairs and U.S. equity
markets over the last five years.
The two markets occasionally intersect, though this is usually only at the extremes and for very short periods. For example, when equity market volatility reaches extraordinary levels (say, the Standard & Poor’s loses 2+ percent in a day), the USD
may experience more pressure than it otherwise would — but there’s no guarantee of that. The U.S. stock market may have dropped on an unexpected hike in U.S. interest rates, while the USD may rally on the surprise move.
Bonds
Fixed-income or bond markets have a more intuitive connection to the forex market because they’re both heavily influenced by interest rate expectations. However, short-term market dynamics of supply and demand interrupt most attempts to establish a viable link between the two markets on a short-term basis.
Sometimes the forex market reacts first and fastest depending on shifts in interest rate expectations. At other times, the bond market more accurately reflects changes in interest rate expectations, with the forex market later playing catch-up.
Overall, as currency traders, you definitely need to keep an eye on the yields of the benchmark government bonds of the major-currency countries to better monitor the expectations of the interest rate market. Changes in relative interest rates
(interest rate differentials) exert a major influence on forex markets.
Price-Earnings Ratio - P/E Ratio
What Does Price-Earnings Ratio - P/E Ratio Mean?
A valuation ratio of a company's current share price compared to its per-share earnings.
Calculated as:
= MARKET VALUE PER SHARE / EARNINGS PER SHARE (EPS)
For example, if a company is currently trading at $43 a share and earnings over the last 12 months were $1.95 per share, the P/E ratio for the stock would be 22.05 ($43/$1.95).
EPS is usually from the last four quarters (trailing P/E), but sometimes it can be taken from the estimates of earnings expected in the next four quarters (projected or forward P/E). A third variation uses the sum of the last two actual quarters and the estimates of the next two quarters.
Also sometimes known as "price multiple" or "earnings multiple".
For Example Price-Earnings Ratio - P/E Ratio
In general, a high P/E suggests that investors are expecting higher earnings growth in the future compared to companies with a lower P/E. However, the P/E ratio doesn't tell us the whole story by itself.
It's usually more useful to compare the P/E ratios of one company to other companies in the same industry, to the market in general or against the company's own historical P/E.
It would not be useful for investors using the P/E ratio as a basis for their investment to compare the P/E of a technology company (high P/E) to a utility company (low P/E) as each industry has much different growth prospects.
The P/E is sometimes referred to as the "multiple", because it shows how much investors are willing to pay per dollar of earnings. If a company were currently trading at a multiple (P/E) of 20, the interpretation is that an investor is willing to pay $20 for $1 of current earnings.
It is important that investors note an important problem that arises with the P/E measure, and to avoid basing a decision on this measure alone. The denominator (earnings) is based on an accounting measure of earnings that is susceptible to forms of manipulation, making the quality of the P/E only as good as the quality of the underlying earnings number.
Foreign Exchange Markets
Although the foreign exchange market is the largest traded market in the world, its reach to the retail sector pales in comparison to the Equity and Fixed Income markets. This is in large part due to a general lack of awareness of FX in the investor community, along with a lack of understanding of how and why currencies move.
Adding to the mystique of this market is the lack of a physical central exchange akin to the NYSE or the CME. It is this very lack of structure that enables the FX markets to operate on a 24-hour basis, beginning the trading day in New Zealand and continuing through the time zones.
Traditionally, access to the FX market was limited to the bank community that traded large blocks of currencies for commercial, hedging, or speculative purposes. The creation of firms like FXDD has opened the door of Forex trading to such institutions as funds and money managers, as well as to the individual retail trader. This sector of the market has grown exponentially over the past several years.
What is Foreign Exchange?
For active traders and investors, foreign exchange should be no different than other investment products such as equities, commodities or fixed-income. Because of globalization in the economic world and consolidation of whole economic regions (i.e., the European Union), including currencies in a portfolio helps to diversify assets and can reduce risk.
Just like other investment alternatives, foreign exchange offers traders/investors a market where they can buy or sell an investment product. In this case it is a specific Currency Pair. The currency pair may be the Euro versus the US Dollar, the US Dollar versus the Japanese Yen, the British Pound versus the US Dollar, the Euro versus British Pound, or a number of other currency combinations.
The different currency combinations represent nothing more than the value of one currency versus the value of another. That relationship is represented by a single price. In foreign exchange, the price of a currency pair is the market’s expectations (at that time) of the value of that currency measured against another currency given the current and expected economic and political situation in the two economies. In equity terms, it is the price of the stock.
If, for example, an economy’s inflation/interest rates are low and stable, if its output is growing strongly, or if its politics are stable and expectations are for more of the same, then one can expect (in general) for that country's currency to remain strong versus a less fundamentally favorable currency.
Contrasting that with an equity, if the domestic and global economy is strong, if inflation is not rampant, if competition is not taking away market share or eating into margins, if product demand and growth are strong, of if the companies internal "politics" are such that the workers are happy and productive, and expectations are for more of the same, then you can expect that company’s stock to remain strong versus a company with less favorable fundamentals.
Similar to equities there are other factors that determine the short term value of a product including technical analysis, short term supply and demand, seasonal capital flow patterns, the current price of the instrument, etc. It is these universal dynamics that will move a currency’s value up or down. (High Risk Warning )(Past Performance)
INTERESTING INFO ABOUT FOREX TRADING
The foreign exchange was recently made available to individual investors and has become the fastest growing market in the world. The trading of currencies between institutions and individuals has become one of the best ways for an individual to create wealth. In fact, online trading is the single most accessible venue an individual has to create wealth in this decade.
The access to technology, high speed internet, charting tools, and other resources available only to professionals before is now available to the public, making the market grow further and giving people control over their trading and the empowerment to make the correct trading decisions.
The forex can be traded in either direction, and the most common currency pairs are the EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/CHF, and the USD/JPY. These are the most robust, the most commonly traded, and have the lowest transaction cost; that is why The Trading Institute offers unlimited live trading using these currency pairs.
The forex moves by PIPs, which is the unit in which the trader gets paid. It reflects the fluctuation of a currency pair, and the value of a PIP is usually 10 dollars, so a move of 10 PIPs is equivalent to 100 dollars. The unit to trade is called a ‘lot’ and it usually requires $1,000 of margin for a 1 lot transaction.
The trader has the option of opening two different types of accounts: a mini account, which requires $250 where the value of a PIP is 1 dollar; or a standard account, which is generally $5,000, or a minimum of $2,500.
The trader does not pay a commission, unlike in most markets; the only transaction cost is the difference between the bid and the ask price, which on average is fixed at 3 to 5 pips. The Trading Institute encourages its students to practice with a demo account to successfully achieve 10 profitable trades. Then Thin slice students may move to a mini account for further practice, and later move on to a standard account once all the concepts have been mastered.
All of the advantages that the forex market offers make it a great market to trade, but like in any other endeavor, it is best to get the proper education before investing any capital. A solid training program with content and guidance is the best way an individual can approach the forex market.
Thin slice Trading is a highly effective program that has a black and white process, is easy to understand, and includes the proper coaching. It is offers unlimited training, keeping in mind that people are conditioned through repetition.
It is easier to understand and learn something new when people hear it more than one time, so a program designed to constantly review information is the best approach to learn the forex. If a trader is looking to consistently make profits in the forex, or any market, the best path is to learn the proper content without being overwhelmed by information.
The Trading Institute utilizes this approach that less is more, and uses only the best information to make the best possible decision.
ONLINE FOREX MARKET’S GROWTH
Article provided by The Federal Reserve Bank of New York
In 1998, the Federal Reserve’s most recently published survey of reporting dealers in the United States estimated that foreign exchange turnover in the U.S. market was $351 billion a day, after adjustments for double counting. That total is an increase of 43% above the estimated turnover in 1995 and more than 60 times the turnover in 1977, the first year for which roughly comparable survey data are available.
In some ways, this estimate understates the growth and the present size of the U.S. foreign exchange market. The $351 billion estimated daily turnover covered only the three traditional instruments in the “over-the-counter” (OTC) market—spot, outright forwards, and foreign exchange (FX) swaps; it did not include over-the counter currency options and currency swaps traded in the OTC market, which totaled about $32 billion a day in notional value (or face value) in 1998.
Nor did it include the two products traded, not “over-the-counter,” but in organized exchanges— currency futures and exchange-traded currency options, for which the notional value of the turnover was perhaps $10 billion per day.
The global foreign exchange market also has shown phenomenal growth. In 1998, in a survey under the auspices of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), global turnover of reporting dealers was estimated at about $1.49 trillion per day for the traditional products, plus an additional $97 billion for over-the-counter currency options and currency swaps, and a further $12 billion for currency instruments traded on the organized exchanges.
In the traditional products, global foreign exchange turnover, measured in current exchange rates, increased by more than 80 percent between 1992 and 1998.
The expansion in foreign exchange turnover, in the United States and globally, reflects the continuing growth of international trade and the prodigious expansion in global finance and investment during recent years.
With respect to trade, the dollar value of United States international transactions in goods and services—the sum of exports and imports—tripled between 1980 and 1995 to around 15 times its 1970 level. International trade in the global economy also has expanded at a rapid pace. World merchandise trade is now more than 2½ times its 1980 level.
But international trade cannot account for the huge increase in the U.S. foreign exchange turnover over the past twenty-five years. The enormous expansion of international capital transactions, both here and abroad, has been a dominant force.
U.S. international capital inflows, including sales of U.S. bonds and equities to foreigners, acquisition of U.S. factories by foreigners, and bank deposit inflows, have averaged more than $180 billion per year since themid-80s.
Large and persistent external trade and payments deficits in the United States and corresponding surpluses abroad have contributed to the growth in financing. Through much of the period since 1983, the United States has recorded trade deficits in the range of $100-$200 billion per year, while Japan and, to a lesser extent, Germany have registered substantial trade surpluses.
In contrast, all three countries experienced only modest trade deficits or surpluses through the 1960s and early 1970s.
The internationalization of financial activity has increased rapidly. Cross-border bank claims are now nearly five times the level of 15 years ago; as a percentage of the combined GDP of the OECD countries, these claims have risen from about 25 percent in 1980 to about 42 percent in 1995.
During that same period, cross border securities transactions in the three largest economies—United States, Japan, and Germany—expanded from less than 10 percent of GDP to around 70 percent of GDP in Japan and to well above 100 percent of GDP in Germany and the United States. Annual issuance of international bonds has more than quadrupled during the past ten years. Between 1988 and 1993, securities settlements through Euro clear and Cedel—the two main Euro market clearing houses— increased six-fold.
All of this provided fertile ground for growth in foreign exchange trading.
Base and Counter Currency
One currency in a currency pair is always dominant. It is called the Base Currency. The base currency is identified as the first currency in a currency pair.
It also is the currency that remains constant when determining a currency pair's price.
The Euro is the dominant base currency against all other global currencies. As a result, currency pairs against the EUR will be identified as EUR/USD, EUR/GBP, EUR/CHF, EUR/JPY, EUR/CAD, etc. All have the EUR acronym as the first in the sequence.
The British Pound is next in the hierarchy of currency name domination. The major currency pairs versus the GBP would, therefore be identified as GBP/USD, GBP/CHF, GBP/JPY, GBP/CAD. Apart from the EUR/GBP, expect to see GBP as the first currency in a currency pair.
The USD is the next dominant base currency. USD/CAD, USD/JPY, USD/CHF would be the normal currency pair convention for the major currencies.
Since the EUR and the GBP are more dominant in terms of base currencies, the dollar is quoted as EUR/USD and GBP/USD.
Knowing the base currency is important as it determines the values of currencies (notional or real) exchanged when a foreign exchange deal is transacted.
The Counter Currency is the second currency in a Currency Pair notation.
Foreign Currency Symbols
Currencies, like equities, have their own symbols that distinguish one from another. Since currencies are quoted in terms of the value of one against the value of another, a currency pair includes the "name" for both currencies, separated by a "/". The "name" is a three letter acronym.
The first two letters are in most cases reserved for identification of the country.
The last letter is the first letter of the unit of currency for that country.
For example,
USD = United States Dollar
GBP = Great Britain Pound
JPY = Japanese Yen
CAD = Canadian Dollar
CHF = Confederatio Helvetica (Latin for Swiss Confederation) Franc
NZD = New Zealand Dollar
AUD = Australian Dollar
NOK = Norwegian Krona
SEK = Swedish Krona
Since the European Euro has no specific country attached to it, it goes simply by the acronym EUR.
By combining one currency, EUR, with another USD, you create a currency pair EUR/USD.
Liquid Currency Pairs
Currencies, like equities and bonds, have pairs that are very liquid and those that are not so liquid.
The liquid currencies can be characterized as those that are the most stable economically and politically.
They include the countries that form the G7 - the United States, Japan, Great Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and Canada.
Since the unification of the European currencies into the EURO, the currencies that are most liquid now include the US Dollar, the Japanese Yen, the British Pound, the Euro, and the Canadian Dollar.
It is estimated that activities in these currencies comprise more than 80% of the daily foreign exchange volume.
Forex Trading Machine, Is It For Real?
Trading the Forex markets has become one of the most popular activities among people from all walks in life but with the solid interest of gaining financial freedom away from the traditional environments of the office work.
But Forex trading is not always easy. You will need a good amount of knowledge related to how the currency markets behave in order to become a profitable forex trader. It is the dream of every trader to have a forex trading machine that would help them once the time to make a transcendental decision in the markets comes.
Now a days a veteran trader has been spreading the word about an original and quite revolutionary way to trade the forex markets. It is a system based on what is called Price Driven Forex Trading (PDFT).
He claims that this is at last that elusive Forex Trading Machine that has been dreamed by many traders for many years. PDFT is a system based in three trading strategies that are able to produce consistent and systematic profits for the trader that follows PDFT to the letter.
Many veteran traders agree that in order to be successful in the world of forex trading you must be original, innovative and different in your trading systems. And this is the basis of the Forex Trading Machine based on a different approach to currency trading, this is by the use of PDFT which is a method of trading the forex market without using any type of indicators, support or resistance levels, moving averages, pivots, oscillators, fibonacci, trend lines or any other trading tool you can think of. Price Driven Forex Trading only uses the price of the currency pair and a time element.
In short, the Forex Trading Machine is what every machine should be; this original trading system is 100% mechanical; this means it requires no discretion or interpretation.
You will simply have to follow strict rules: if A = B then do C. That’s it.
And finally
if you ask me a question - Is the Forex Trading Machine for real this time?
My answer is
YES…
Forex Pairs Around the World
As far as popular Forex pairs are concerned it is really difficult to pin point the exact pairs because of changing nature of the economy, but still there are many pairs that are relatively strong as compared to other currencies. The most “liquid” currencies in the forex market are those of countries with low inflation, stable governments, and respected central banks.
Nearly 85% of daily transactions involve the major currencies, including the U.S. Dollar, Japanese Yen, the European Union Euro, British Pound, Swiss Franc, and the Canadian and Australian Dollars. In other words, EURUSD, GBPUSD, USDJPY, USDCHF, AUDUSD, USDCAD are amongst the most popular pairs to trade around the world.
When dealing in the pairs, we should know what exactly “short” and “long” positions refer to. In simplest terms, short positions are taken when a trader sells currency in anticipation of a downturn in price. So, how that helps? Making this move allows the investor to benefit from a decline. Similarly, long positions are taken when a trader buys a currency at a low price in anticipation of selling it later for more. Making these moves allows the investor to benefit from changing market prices.
So, we shouldn’t forget that since currencies are traded in pairs, every forex position inevitably requires the investor to go short in one currency and long in the other. That is the real crux of the story. That is the point where whole juice of this concept lies.
So, we have explained in the above-mentioned paragraphs regarding the most popular pairs and why they are the most preferred pairs. One of the most important factors is that the full range of economic and political conditions impact currency pricing. It is generally held that interest rates, inflation rates and political stability are top among important factors.
At times, governments participate in the forex market in order to influence the traded value of their currencies. Not only just the economic and government factors, but other market factors also such as very large orders can cause extreme relative volatility in currency prices. The sheer size of the forex market prevents any single factor from dominating the market for any length of time.
The resultant is the end result of these factors along with other factors (sometimes even unknown to the experts, as they are circumstantial in nature).
So, whenever we think about making profits, we need these popular pairs, which are relatively strong. In macro terms there are two kinds of factors that influence the decisions of currency traders: economic factors and fundamental factors.
Absolutely there is no foolproof strategy that can be used as template as some of these factors are uncontrollable in nature. However, those who follow economic fundamentals use government issued reports, current news, and broad economic trends to anticipate movements in price.
On the other hand, technical traders primarily rely on trend lines, support and resistance levels, and a variety of charts and mathematical analysis to identify trading opportunities in the market. However, the most significant price movements occur in close association with unexpected and sometimes uncontrollable events.
Perhaps the central bank changes rates without warning or an election puts an unexpected candidate in power. News (or even rumors) from conflicts certainly impacts currency pricing. More often than not, it is the expectation of a certain event rather than the actual event that drives price pressures. And hence the importance of these most popular pairs comes into play. These may or may not be of interest to everyone, but when it comes to the real professional and market experts, they know what that means and accordingly they take decision.
Forex Trading Systems For your Supplemental Income
I recently lost the income from business due to the impact off the credit crunch on cash flow. I decided to look for alternative sources of income. By nature I'm a risk taker. One thing that caught my eye is Forex Trading Systems that make extraordinary claims.
My question is what are Forex Systems? Are Forex Trading Systems a scam?
Forex Trading Systems are automated programs that track and make trades in the international currency market 24 X 7.
Based on my research and personal experience I don't think Forex Trading Systems are a scam. I'm sure there are some that are trying to rip off the leaders, but overall I think they have potential to make you some good supplemental income trading in the international currency market. I think based on the corruption that has taken place on Wall Street with securities Forex short term trading is actually a safer investment.
There are lots of places to find out more information about Forex Trading Systems on the net.
There are several things to look at when deciding whether to participate in a Forex Automated Trading System.
Risk tolerance:
Everyone has a different level of risk tolerance when making a decision to invest in a marketable security. The program you choose should be flexible enough to match your profile.
Demo Account:
They should allow you to dummy trade to allow you to gain confidence.
Software Updates:
They system should be updated on a regular basis to stay current with ever changing market conditions.
Choose a program with a track record:
Let other people be the pioneer with a new program. You can always switch to it once they have a track record.
I think if you do the research and follow these simple guidelines you can find a system that works for your situation.
WISH YOU ALL SUCCESS.....
Individual Investors Can Benefit from Forex
Indeed large multinational and individual banks and other major financial institutions have dominated FX trading (also known as Forex trading), but there is a paradigm change in the nature and type of investing. According to one estimate, in the new millennium, there are over 6 million online investment accounts, up from 1.5 million in 1997.
As a result, start-up firms now compete directly with financial institutions to serve investors in the new technologically driven economy, and the clear winner is the customer. The competition between the brick and mortar institutions and the Internet-based companies has dramatically lowered the costs of investing, and empowered the individual investor to take control of their own investment strategy in Forex trading.
We know Forex trading is direct access trading of currencies. In the past, foreign exchange trading was limited to large banks and institutional traders but recent advancements in technology have allowed small traders to take advantage of the many benefits of Forex trading using online trading platforms to trade. Virtually Forex trading is done 24 hours day and almost 5 ½ days of a week. In the recent times, online trading has revolutionized the currency markets by making it accessible to the small and medium sized investor.
The Forex trading is perhaps the largest financial market in the world, with a daily average turnover of approximately $1.5 trillion. Foreign Exchange is the simultaneous buying of one currency and selling of another. The world's currencies are on a floating exchange rate and are always traded in pairs, for example EUR/USD or USD/JPY or USD/INR etc.
In the new millennium, the Forex trading has become accessible for an individual investor or small group of investors. In the current scenario, investors reap many benefits from Forex trading than stock market, e-mini futures and such other trading. Today mostly traders are choosing Forex trading than stock trading because there are approximately 4,500 stocks listed on the New York Stock exchange. Another 3,500 are listed on the NASDAQ. In spot Forex trading, you have 4 major markets, 24 hours a day 5.5 days a week.
If you are so inclined, you have approximately 34 second-tier currencies to look at in your spare time. You can concentrate on the major forex and can find your trade. When you are investing in forex you can spend your afternoon on the golf course or with your spouse watching movie or celebrating holidays—in short it is easy and hassle free than stock/future market.
Not only is it an accessible, easy and less capital-intensive business opportunity, but it is much more cost efficient too to invest in the Forex market, in terms of both commissions and transaction fees. Generally, commissions for stock trades range from a low of $7.95-$29.95 per trade with on-line brokers to over $100 per trade with traditional brokers. Opposite to that, typically stock commissions are directly related to the level of service offered by the broker. At the high end, traditional brokers offer full access to research, analyst stock recommendations, etc. In contrast, on-line Forex brokers charge significantly lower commission and transaction fees.
In Forein Exchange Value of Currencies
The base currency is always equal to one of the currency's monetary unit of exchange (i.e., 1 Euro, 1 Pound, and 1 Dollar). When an investor buys 100,000 EUR/USD, he is said to be buying (or receiving) the EURO or the Base Currency and selling (or paying for) the USD or Counter Currency.
The amount of the Base Currency he is buying is equal to 100,000 Euros. Note that this is true no matter the current exchange rate at the time. The base currency amount remains constant.
The Counter Currency equivalent amount that the investor is selling (or paying), on the other hand, will fluctuate with the exchange rate for the Currency Pair. It is equal to:
(Amount of Base Currency x Market Foreign Exchange Rate)
Since the Counter Currency is the part of the currency pair that fluctuates higher or lower, it determines the strength or weakness of both currencies in a currency pair. As one currency goes up, the other must go down.
Currencies trade in fractions of a full unit. The smallest fraction is called a "pip". Currencies trade in pips because exchanges of currencies for speculative reasons are generally for large amounts. This is because of the leverage that is available when trading Foreign Exchange.
FXDD provides a Maximum Trading Leverage Ratio of 100:1for standard accounts. At that ratio, a 100,000 EUR position would require $1,200 of Margin at an exchange rate of 1.2000. This is calculated by taking the US$ equivalent of 100,000 EUR or US$120,000 and dividing by the 100:1 leverage ratio.
Margin Required = $120,000 / 100 = $1,200
To determine the value of a pip for the deal above the following calculation would be made:
Value in US$ = 1.20 x Par Amount of Base Currency = $120,000
Value in US$ + a pip = (1.20+.0001) x Par Amount of Base Currency = $120,000
The value of a pip in dollars is equal to $120,000 - $119,990 or $10.
When a currency pair goes from a low price to a higher price, the Base Currency is said to have strengthened or gotten stronger. The converse is true for the Counter Currency. That is, it has weakened or gotten weaker as the Base Currency has gotten stronger.
Since Exchange Rates represent what a fixed amount of currency is equal to in terms of another currency, we have seen there is just one price for the Currency Pair. The movement of that price determines whether a currency is getting stronger or weaker.
If the EUR/USD exchange rate goes from 1.2000 to 1.2024, we have concluded that the EUR got stronger, the USD weaker. Why?
When looking at Foreign Exchange Rates (or prices) an action to Buy the Currency Pair implies buying the Base Currency, or EUR, and selling the Counter Currency, or USD. If the EUR/USD exchange rate moves higher, as expected, the trader can now sell the EUR/USD at a dearer/higher price. The difference represents a Profit to the trader that was Long, or who bought the EUR/USD Currency Pair.
Forex Transacting Fundamentals
Buying and Selling Foreign Exchange
What exactly do you buy or sell when you make a foreign currency transaction?
In reality, you are doing both actions - buying and selling. A transaction of Buying the EUR/USD at 1.2000 is actually buying the Euro and selling the Dollars at 1.2000 cents. If the Euro increases in value in relation to the dollar, the price would increase and the investor will make money.
If for whatever reason, a trader could not execute an order using FXDD, a verbal order to a broker could be the following:
"I buy 100,000 Euros and sell the dollar at the Market"
or
"I buy 500,000 EUR/USD on a 1.2100 stop"
or
"I buy 100,000 Euros vs. the Dollar at the market"
What is required on all verbal orders is the amount, the Currency Pair, the rate and/or the type of order. Simply saying "I buy the Dollar at the Market" is not good enough as it does not say what currency the trader wants to sell.
Bid/Ask Price
Like equities, foreign exchange has a Bid price and an Ask price. The bid is where the market maker will buy. The ask is where the market maker will sell. For investors, the reverse is true. The bid price is where an investor can sell, while the ask is where an investor can buy.
The bid price is always less than the ask price. This makes logical sense as a market maker, like any investor, wants to buy low and sell high.
The spread between the bid and the ask is called the Bid/Ask Spread or Dealing Spread. The bid/ask spread is the premium that market makers charge to provide constant liquidity to a retail client base. For example, the bid and ask might be 1.2050/1.2055. The spread is 5 pips.
Paralleling forex trading to equities, a market maker, like FXDD, is the equivalent of a specialist on the floor of the exchange.
A specialist is always willing and able to make a market (i.e. provide liquidity) to the market/investor. For this service, he will have a bid where he buys the stock and an offer or ask, where he will sell the stock. The bid/ask spread the specialist charges will fluctuate with the general liquidity of the underlying stock.
That same principle applies to FXDD's Bid/Ask Spreads.
Dealing Spreads for the major currencies pairs on FXDD are 2-3 pips wide. Some less liquid currencies will be a bit wider. This reflects the relative liquidity/risk in the professional market for that particular currency pair. The dealing spreads that we quote reflect a normal market making spread given the risks we take and the costs we incur for servicing our clients' business.
Obviously, if the volatility and risk of making a market increase because the markets become less liquid, it stands to reason that our spreads will increase as well. These are universal realities of market makers and should not come as a surprise to knowing investors/traders.
May 26, 2009
Tips To Be an Successful Long-Term Investor
A quote from Peter Lynch's book "One Up on Wall Street" (1990) about his experience with Subaru demonstrates this: "If I'd bothered to ask myself, 'How can this stock go any higher?' I would have never bought Subaru after it already went up twentyfold.
But I checked the Fundamentals, realized that Subaru was still cheap, bought the stock, and made sevenfold after that." The point is to base a decision on future potential rather than on what has already happened in the past.
Be concerned about taxes, but don't worry.
The Biggest Stock Market Myths
When fiascos like the Enron bankruptcy, auditing scandals and analysts' conflict of interest occur, investor confidence can be at an all-time low. Many investors are wonder whether or not investing in stocks is worth all the hassle. At the same time, however, it's important to keep a realistic view of the stock market. Regardless of the real problems, common myths about the stock market often arise. Here we go over these myths in order to bust them.
Investing in stocks is Just like a gambling.
This reasoning causes many people to shy away from the stock market. To understand why investing in stocks is inherently different from gambling, we need to review what it means to buy stocks. A share of common stock is ownership in a company. It entitles the holder to a claim on assets as well as a fraction of the profits that the company generates.
Too often, investors think of shares as simply a trading vehicle, and they forget that stock represents the ownership of a company. In the stock market, investors are constantly trying to assess the profit that will be left over for shareholders. This is why stock prices fluctuate. The outlook for business conditions is always changing, and so are the future earnings of a company. Assessing the value of a company isn't an easy practice.
There are so many variables involved that the short-term price movements appear to be random (academics call this the Random walk Theory); however, over the long term, a company is only worth the Present Value of the profits it will make. In the short term a company can survive without profits because of the expectations of future earnings, but no company can fool investors forever - eventually a company's stock price can be expected to show the true value of the firm.
Gambling, on the contrary, is a Zero-sum game. It merely takes money from a loser and gives it to a winner. No value is ever created. By investing, we increase the overall wealth of an economy. As companies compete, they increase productivity and develop products that can make our lives better. Don't confuse investing and creating wealth with gambling's zero-sum game.
The stock market is an exclusive club
In which only brokers and rich people make money. Many market advisors claim to be able to call the markets' every turn. The fact is that almost every study done on this topic has proven that these claims are false. Most market prognosticators are notoriously inaccurate; furthermore, the advent of the internet has made the market much more open to the public than ever before.
All the data and research tools previously available only to brokerages are now there for individuals to use. Actually, individuals have an advantage over institutional investors because individuals can afford to be long-term oriented. The big money managers are under extreme pressure to get high returns every quarter.
Their performance is often so scrutinized that they can't invest in opportunities that take some time to develop. Individuals have the ability to look beyond temporary downturns in favor of a long-term outlook.
Fallen Angels will all go back up, eventually.
Whatever the reason for this myth's appeal, nothing is more destructive to amateur investors than thinking that a stock trading near a 52 week low is a good buy. Think of this in terms of the old Wall Street adage, "Those who try to catch a Falling Knife only get hurt."
Stocks that go up must come down..
The laws of physics do not apply in the stock market. There is no gravitational force that pulls stocks back to even. Over ten years ago, Berkshire Hathaway's stock price went from $6,000 to $10,000 per share in a little more than a year. Had you thought that this stock was going to return to its lower initial position, you would have missed out on the subsequent rise to $70,000 per share over the following six years.
We're not trying to tell you that stocks never undergo a correction. The point is that the stock price is a reflection of the company. If you find a great firm run by excellent managers, there is no reason the stock won't keep on going up.
Having just a little knowledge
Because it is better than none, is enough to invest in the stock market. Knowing something is generally better than nothing, but it is crucial in the stock market that individual investors have a clear understanding of what they are doing with their money.
It's those investors who really do their homework that succeed. Don't fret, if you don't have the time to fully understand what to do with your money, then having an advisor is not a bad thing. The cost of investing in something that you do not fully understand far outweighs the cost of using an investment advisor.
May 25, 2009
Net income
What Does Net Income - NI Mean?
A company's total earnings (or profit). Net income is calculated by taking revenues and adjusting for the cost of doing business, depreciation, interest, taxes and other expenses. This number is found on a company's income statement and is an important measure of how profitable the company is over a period of time. The measure is also used to calculate earnings per share. Often referred to as "the bottom line" since net income is listed at the bottom of the income statement. In the U.K., net income is known as "profit attributable to shareholders".
An individual’s income after deductions, credits and taxes are factored into gross income. Deductions and credits are subtracted from gross income to arrive at taxable income, which is used to calculate income tax. Net income is income tax subtracted from taxable income.
For Example Net Income -
Net income is calculated by starting with a company's total revenue. From this, the cost of sales, along with any other expenses that the company incurred during the period, is removed to reach earnings before tax. Tax is deducted from this amount to reach the net income number. Net income, like other accounting measures, is susceptible to manipulation through such things as aggressive revenue recognition or by hiding expenses.
When basing an investment decision on net income numbers, it is important to review the quality of the numbers that were used to arrive at this value.
For example, suppose that your gross income is $50,000 and you have $20,000 in deductions and credits. This leaves you with a taxable income of $30,000. Then, suppose that another $5,000 of income tax is subtracted; the remaining $25,000 will be your net income.
Horizontal Analysis
What Does Horizontal Analysis Mean?
A procedure in fundamental analysis in which an analyst compares ratios or line items in a company's financial statements over a certain period of time. The analyst will use his or her discretion when choosing a particular timeline; however, the decision is often based on the investing time horizon under consideration.
For Example Horizontal Analysis
For example, when you hear someone saying that revenues increased by 10% this past quarter, that person is using horizontal analysis. Horizontal analysis can be used on any item in a company's financials (from revenues to earnings per share), and is useful when comparing the performance of various companies.
Fundamental Analysis
What Does Fundamental Analysis Mean?
A method of evaluating a security by attempting to measure its intrinsic value by examining related economic, financial and other qualitative and quantitative factors. Fundamental analysts attempt to study everything that can affect the security's value, including macroeconomic factors (like the overall economy and industry conditions) and individually specific factors (like the financial condition and management of companies).
The end goal of performing fundamental analysis is to produce a value that an investor can compare with the security's current price in hopes of figuring out what sort of position to take with that security (underpriced = buy, overpriced = sell or short).This method of security analysis is considered to be the opposite of technical analysis.
For Example Fundamental Analysis
Fundamental analysis is about using real data to evaluate a security's value. Although most analysts use fundamental analysis to value stocks, this method of valuation can be used for just about any type of security. For example, an investor can perform fundamental analysis on a bond's value by looking at economic factors, such as interest rates and the overall state of the economy, and information about the bond issuer, such as potential changes in credit ratings.
For assessing stocks, this method uses revenues, earnings, future growth, return on equity, profit margins and other data to determine a company's underlying value and potential for future growth. In terms of stocks, fundamental analysis focuses on the financial statements of a the company being evaluated.
One of the most famous and successful users of fundamental analysis is the Oracle of Omaha, Warren Buffett, who has been well known for successfully employing fundamental analysis to pick securities. His abilities have turned him into a billionaire.
Quant Fund
What Does Quant Fund Mean?
An investment fund that selects securities based on quantitative analysis. In such funds, the managers build computer-based models to determine whether or not an investment is attractive. In a pure "quant shop" the final decision to buy or sell is made by the model. However, there is a middle ground where the fund manager will use human judgment in addition to a quantitative model.
For ExampleQuant Fund
If computers can beat world champion chess players, shouldn't they be able to beat the traders on Wall Street? That's the thinking behind quant funds, whose name comes from the term "quantitative analysis". The advantage is that computers aren't swayed by emotion, and they obviously react much faster than a person ever could.
The problem is that humans have to program those computers, and even computers can make mistakes when they are programmed incorrectly. Remember the saying "garbage in, garbage out". To take advantage of the power of computers, you still have to figure out a superior investment strategy.
The term "quantitative fund" also doesn't tell you anything about the actual investment strategy being used. Any study of a company or an industry based on quantitative data can be considered a quant strategy.
Emotional Neutrality
What Does Emotional Neutrality Mean?
The concept of removing greed, fear and other human emotions from financial or investment decisions. The goal of emotional neutrality is to remove any weight that emotions may play in the process of making objective financial decisions, so that the best possible decision can be made, in spite of whatever emotions those decisions may trigger.
For Example Emotional Neutrality
The concept of emotional neutrality arises out of the typical human reaction to profits and losses -- investors are typically pleased when their trades produce profits and unhappy when their trades produce losses. However, if investors are able to remove the impact that their emotions have on their trading decisions, proponents of emotional neutrality contend that doing so will result in improved trading performance.Taking things one step further, some investors adopt what is called a contrarian strategy, in which they attempt to buy securities when everyone else is selling them, and sell securities when everyone else is buying them. The rationale behind this strategy is that if investors are not emotionally neutral, their emotions will impact their trading decisions and thus under- or over-value securities, creating an opportunity for profit for contrarian traders.
Nervous Nellie
What Does Nervous Nellie Mean?
An investor who isn't comfortable with investing and the risks associated with it.
For Example Nervous Nellie
If a nervous nellie ever does decide to invest, he or she is likely to liquidate the investment at any time.
Loss Psychology
What Does Loss Psychology Mean?
The emotional aspects associated with investing and the negative sentiment associated with recognizing a loss. The fear of financial losses can be overcome, but it requires looking at what has happened logically and learning from it so that you can avoid the same situation in the future.
For Example Loss Psychology
The difference between professional traders and those who are just getting started is their ability to handle the emotions associated with realizing a loss. Holding a losing position can cripple a rookie investor because many decide to hold and hope that the stock will come back to their entry price. The worst case scenario is if the investor sells when the stock has reached a bottom.
Panic Selling
What Does Panic Selling Mean?
Wide-scale selling of an investment, causing a sharp decline in price. In most instances of panic selling, investors just want to get out of the investment, with little regard for the price at which they sell.
For Example Panic Selling
Panic SellingThe main problem with panic selling is that investors are selling in reaction to pure emotion and fear, rather than evaluating fundamentals. Almost every market crash is a result of panic selling. Most major stock exchanges use trading curbs and halts to limit panic selling, to allow people to digest any information on why the selling is occurring, and to restore some degree of normalcy to the market.
Air Pocket Stock
What Does Air Pocket Stock Mean?
A stock that experiences a sudden drop, similar to a plane hitting an air pocket. Air pocket stocks are usually the result of investors reacting to negative news.
For Example Air Pocket Stock
Air Pocket StockThis is almost always caused by shareholders selling because of unexpected bad news. An air pocket stock isn’t necessarily in dire straits. More often than not, the abrupt, drop caused by disgruntled investors is usually the end of the correction.
Falling Knife
What Does Falling Knife Mean?
A slang phrase for a security or industry in which the current price or value has dropped significantly in a short period of time. A falling knife security can rebound, or it can lose all of its value, such as in the case of company bankruptcy where equity shares become worthless. A falling knife situation can occur because of actual business results (such as a big drop in net earnings) or because of increasingly negative investor sentiment.
For Example Falling Knife
As the phrase suggests, buying into a market with a lot of downward momentum can be quite dangerous. If timed perfectly, a buy at the bottom of a long downtrend can be rewarding - both financially and emotionally - but the risks run extremely high. This term implies that the investment will never be a good one again. Examples of stocks that have plummeted are plentiful; a widely-held stock can drop precipitously as the equity ownership is reduced to nothing.
Fallen Angel
What Does Fallen Angel Mean?
A bond that was once investment grade but has since been reduced to junk bond status.
A stock that has fallen substantially from its all time highs.
For Example Fallen Angel
There is a fine line between fallen angels that are value stocks and those that are headed straight towards bankruptcy.
Bull Market
What Does Bull Market Mean?
A financial market of a group of securities in which prices are rising or are expected to rise. The term "bull market" is most often used to refer to the stock market, but can be applied to anything that is traded, such as bonds, currencies and commodities.
For Example Bull Market
Bull markets are characterized by optimism, investor confidence and expectations that strong results will continue. It's difficult to predict consistently when the trends in the market will change. Part of the difficulty is that psychological effects and speculation may sometimes play a large role in the markets.
The use of "bull" and "bear" to describe markets comes from the way the animals attack their opponents. A bull thrusts its horns up into the air while a bear swipes its paws down. These actions are metaphors for the movement of a market. If the trend is up, it's a bull market. If the trend is down, it's a bear market
Bear Tack
What Does Bear Tack Mean?
A fall in the price of a stock, sector, or market, or investor sentiment that assumes a fall will happen soon. A bear tack is usually used to describe bearish movement in the short to medium term.
For Example Bear Tack
In sailing, a tack is a maneuver in which a boat turns its bow to put the wind on the opposite side of the boat. A bear tack is a buzz word that is derived from this sailing term to explain a change in movement of a security or index.
Bear Raid
What Does Bear Raid Mean?
The illegal practice of attempting to push the price of a stock lower by taking large short positions and spreading unfavorable rumors about the target firm.
For Example Bear Raid
In a bear raid, the manipulators profit on the difference between the original stock price and the lower (manipulated) price. This was a popular practice in the early 1900s
Bear Market
What Does Bear Market Mean?
A market condition in which the prices of securities are falling, and widespread pessimism causes the negative sentiment to be self-sustaining. As investors anticipate losses in a bear market and selling continues, pessimism only grows. Although figures can vary, for many, a downturn of 20% or more in multiple broad market indexes, such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) or Standard & Poor's 500 Index (S&P 500), over at least a two-month period, is considered an entry into a bear market.
For Example Bear Market
A bear market should not be confused with a correction, which is a short-term trend that has a duration of less than two months. While corrections are often a great place for a value investor to find an entry point, bear markets rarely provide great entry points, as timing the bottom is very difficult to do. Fighting back can be extremely dangerous because it is quite difficult for an investor to make stellar gains during a bear market unless he or she is a short seller
Bear
What Does Bear Mean?
An investor who believes that a particular security or market is headed downward. Bears attempt to profit from a decline in prices. Bears are generally pessimistic about the state of a given market.
For Example Bear
For example, if an investor were bearish on the S&P 500 they would attempt to profit from a decline in the broad market index. Bearish sentiment can be applied to all types of markets including commodity markets, stock markets and the bond market. Although you often hear that the stock market is constantly in a state of flux as the bears and their optimistic counterparts, "bulls", are trying to take control, do remember that over the last 100 years or so the U.S. stock market has increased an average 11% a year. This means that every single long-term market bear has lost money
Bull
What Does Bull Mean?
An investor who thinks the market, a specific security or an industry will rise.
Example For Bull
Bulls are optimistic investors who are presently predicting good things for the market, and are attempting to profit from this upward movement. For example if you are bullish on the S&P 500 you will attempt to profit from a rise in the index by going long on it. Bulls are are the exact opposite of the market's bears, who are pessimistic and believe that a particular security, commodity or entity will suffer a decline in price. Bullishness does not necessarily apply only to the stock market; you could for example be bullish on just about anything, including commodities like soy beans, crude oil or even peanuts.
Call Ratio Backspread
What Does Call Ratio Backspread Mean?
A very bullish investment strategy that combines options to create a spread with limited loss potential and mixed profit potential. It is generally created by selling one call option and then using the collected premium to purchase a greater number of call options at a higher strike price. This strategy has potentially unlimited upside profit because the trader is holding more long call options than short ones.
Example For Call Ratio Backspread
An investor using this strategy would sell fewer calls at a low strike price and buy more calls at a high strike price. The most common ratios used in this strategy are one short call combined with two long calls, or two short calls combined with three long calls. If this strategy is established at a credit, the trader stands to make a small gain if the price of the underlying decreases
Good Home-Based Business Opportunity - FOREX TRADING
Forex Auto money software provides the background information and analysis needed for the investor to be able to make reliable decisions as to whether to buy or sell. It removes the need for the budding trader to spend a great deal of valuable time learning the finer details of foreign exchange trading.
This currency trading software is considered to be the #1 forex trading signals generator. The software is a valuable tool for foreign exchange traders. Alternative forex systems aren't easy for beginners to understand or for traders who wish to deal in relatively small amounts of money. Other systems require the investor to have a much more extensive and deeper knowledge of Currency Trading or Forex Trading as it is frequently called.
Forex Auto money is an automatic robot trading system which provides intraday (up to six times per day), daily and weekly market signals. It is a membership service which provides Forex trading signals. The company maintains its aim of providing first hand information on its website.
As with many programmes which deliver high financial returns, doubts are at times expressed concerning the reliability of Forex Auto money. Is it a scam and does it deliver what it says it will? The company has been successfully operating for over 8 years and during that time has proved its worth and reliability, demonstrating that it is no fly-by-night scammer.
The Company is the leading Forex trading signals generator and is used by many traders.
Forex auto money is simply software that generates forex signals based on mathematical algorithms and technical analysis. It runs a monthly membership service where the member is charged for the forex signals he or she uses.
It is one of the few currency trading systems that do work successfully. This powerful trading system can definitely assist and guide someone new to foreign exchange trading to establish him or herself in forex marketing. For some-one looking for a profitable online income, this is a good place to start.
Before Starting Forex Trading
Trading the Forex Markets can be very profitable. It can also be an easy way to lose all your money. It all depends on your approach in the Market. The Forex doesn't necessarily require you to go through an extensive research and study program for months.
You will, however, need to invest some time and effort to digest all the information required to do well at it. Provided you trade wisely and cautiously, you can become a Forex expert within a year or so, making consistent substantial profits from it. So, where do you start? Well, at the beginning, of course.
Get a decent Internet connection
It may seem silly to have to mention this but, at least in my experience; a slow or dodgy internet connection can cost you...a lot. Part of what has made Forex Trading so accessible to regular folks is availability of high quality free software and market information.
There's a wide array of sources of information, most over the internet, so the importance of the internet is obvious. The main reason why the quality of the internet connection comes up, aside from speedy delivery of information, is software trade execution. I once entered a trade impulsively - this is a big no-no, and this example underscores why - and, shortly afterwards, realized my mistake. I knew I needed to get out immediately.
I attempted to do so but my Wireless internet connection went off at that point. I had lost a substantial amount of money by the time I got my connection back.
I blamed karma. Fate was obviously after me. In truth, it was because of my unreliable internet connection. All it takes is one case such as this to destroy your trading Account. If you are going to trade seriously, get a good broadband service.
Research & planning
The second phase of Forex trading has four sub-steps: research, research, research and planning. One just cannot put too much emphasis on the importance of research in Forex trading. Read a book, or three.
Get some background on world markets and how they affect each other. Remember that the Forex Market is influenced by a lot of external factors. You will need to understand correlations to maximize your profits. There is some free information available, so you don't necessarily have to spend money.
However, be wary of e-books that try to sell you systems. Get your own knowledge first...unless of course you can try them risk-free.
Along with research, formulate a feasible plan about how you will conduct your trading. If possible, write it down and treat it like a business plan. It should serve as your blueprint for trading. Think about how much you are going to invest.
Also write down your short-term and long-term goals and how much loss you can afford. Your strategy will depend on this information so try to be clear and precise.
Find a broker
Your next step is to find a brokerage firm through whom you will buy and sell currencies. You need to be thorough while checking out brokers. Regulation in the Forex Market is no where near the level of other markets. There are still a number of unscrupulous firms out there that might try to defraud you.
Try to find a firm that has ties with an international bank or any other financial institution. You should also check if the firm is registered with Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the US government institution that regulates fraudulent trading practices.
Along with the above, you will also want to confirm that the broker is a good fit for you.
How good is their software? Do they allow you trade and view charts via website, in case you are unable to get to your own computer? Do they have a mobile application? Make sure you have all these answers. Ultimately, if you are unhappy with one, you can change to another one.
Set up a demo account and trade
All brokers should now offer demo trading accounts. These will allow you trade "fake" money against real-life conditions. Open one and trade, trade, trade! Test out your strategies for at least a few months on a demo account before going live. You will learn a lot about yourself and what you are comfortable with as a trader this way.
Once you have gone through this, you will be ready to begin your Forex Trading journey properly to your drean world.
IF YOU HAVE ANY DOUBTS ON TERMS KINDLY VIEW THE TERMS SECTIONS.....
Forex Trading Tips - MOST IMPORTANT
Forex trading can be a very profitable business in today’s world, provided you know what you are doing. Like anything worthwhile, it involves some pain. You will almost certainly lose money in the early stages.
In fact, you will continue to have losses even when you are an expert. A successful Forex trader is one for whom the total amount of profit eventually outweighs the amount of loss. At the end of the day, Forex trading is based on speculation, which always involves some amount of risk. The key is to ensure that you control those losses.
Below, Some tips to become a successful Forex Trader.
Having enough capital
Only a small percentage of Forex Traders are actually successful. The exact figure might be difficult to ascertain, but think along the lines of 1 in 10. The successful ones avoid some mistakes that other Forex traders make and try to follow some basic rules. One very important rule you need to remember is to have enough capital in your account when you start trading. Also, it would be wise not to invest money that you cannot afford to lose. There’s no point risking your life savings, if you have them, in trading Forex. On a smaller scale, don’t risk your rent or grocery money. Remember, at the start the chances of some losses are high. Take that into account when funding your account.
Choosing the appropriate currency pairs
Selecting the appropriate Currency Pair to trade is also crucial for a successful Forex trader. Some currency pairs are more volatile in certain conditions while others are stable. Select a pair that is in line with your trading strategy, long term or short term. If your strategy calls for a short-term investment, then you can try more volatile pairs.
However, if you are in it for the long haul, or are uncomfortable with rapid changes in prices, then you can choose a pair that is relatively stable. You have to do some research on Currency pairs and their performances in various climates to help make this choice.
Having entry and exit strategies
Every Forex Trading Operation has basic components: the selected currency pair you wish to trade, the required period, an entry point, and exit point. Your Forex Plan should include sound entry and exit strategies in order to minimize the losses and maximize your return on investment. You could also learn to use stop loss and take profit orders placed to your broker as your exit points.
A stop loss is an excellent exit strategy in case the market moves against you. Stop loss orders are placed to the brokers by the Forex traders to withdraw from the market if the market moves against them and they stand to lose a specific amount of money. A stop loss order protects you from huge losses in case something goes wrong.
Similarly, in case of a take profit, you will exit the market after making a certain amount of profit. Both of these involve you as a trader setting a target and sticking with it. Sometimes, when in an actual trade, it might be difficult for you to make the required exit from a trade, even when your target has been met. Emotions could come into play, or you might even suddenly have trouble accessing your Software. Pre-setting Stop losses and take Profit orders allow and even force you to keep to your plan.
Sticking to your own strategy
There are numerous articles, e-books, trading systems available in the market that will claim to make you rich, almost overnight. Most of them sound downright convincing and will tell you that you can make a lot of money using their strategies without taking any risk at all. While a few of them may be genuinely good, most of these strategies will only confuse you initially.
So, before you try any out on your Account, do the smart thing: test it on a demo account. Be sure of it. Then you can trade with it. Remember, there is no simple short-cut to becoming a successful Forex trader.
IF YOU HAVE ANY DOUBTS ON TERMS KINDLY VIEW THE TERMS AT THE POSTS....