Tag Archive | "Ask"

Cut Your Forex Trading Cost With Rebates

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The Forex broker always earns whenever you trade.

If he takes no commission, then it’s the bid-ask-spread of every trade you take he makes money on.

When setting profit targets, you should regard the spread as cost of trading, which is reducing your profit potential.

Another cost factor is the swap you might have to pay, if you hold an open position overnight.

Depending on your lot size and the currency pair you trade, the swap or rollover-charge can be quite hefty.

Especially if you don’t close your positions on Wednesdays, because many brokers will then calculate the swap for three days.

This is because in the spot forex market, all trades are settled 2 business days from inception. And if you hold an open position over night, it will be rolled over to a new value date. Thus when you roll an open position from Wednesday to Thursday, then Monday next week becomes the value date, not Saturday. Therefore the rollover charge (swap) on a Wednesday evening will be three times the normal value.

What many Forex traders are not aware of is, that they can cut down their forex trading cost with rebates.

How do Forex trading rebates or trade rebates work?

Normally you don’t get them from your Froex Broker directly, but from a third party, the so called Introducing Broker.

The Introducing Broker “introduces” new clients to the Forex Broker – he brings him new business.

The Forex  Broker pays the Introducing broker a commission for every new client.

And some Introducing Brokers give back some of their commission to the clients they have referred to the Forex Broker.

Mostly this is done by rebating your trades at the brokerage and giving back some pips value to you , the trader.

Some Introducing Brokers will do so by paying this rebates to your paypal account, other will put the rebates directly into your trading account.

To discover in detail how to cut your Forex trading cost with rebates, go here.

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Forex Trading 101

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Forex trading takes place through major banks, market makers, and brokerage hourses around the world, who together create a marketplace for trading currencies on a near 24/7 basis.

The Forex market is always “open”; it’s the 7-Eleven of the trading world and is the largest financial network in the world with daily average turnover totaling trillions of dolaars.

It is also a growing market, as more traders turn to foreign currency trading and away from stocks.

At its simplest, trading foreign currency involves two currencies traded similtaneously, called a ‘pair’. Fore example, the EUR/USD pair, trade the Euro against the US Dollar. In this example, a buyer of this pair would be ‘buying’ the Euro and ‘selling’ the US Dollar.

Forex pairs are described in the following format: XXX/YYY

XXX, the first currency in the pair, is called the ‘base’ currency. YYY, the second currency in the pair, is called the ‘counter’ currency in the pair. Prices are always expressed in terms of the counter currency.

For example if the current price of the EUR/USD pair is shown as 1.3667, this would mean that 1 Euro (the base currency) equals $ 1.3667 US Dollars.

Most major pairs are priced to 4 decimals, or 1/100th of one percent. The exception to this is the Japanese Yen pair, which trades only to 2 decimals. This is because there are typically over 100 Yen to the dollar.

In an instance where the US Dollar is the base currency, the USD/JPY pair for example, prices here are expressed in Japanese Yen. If the current price is 108.02, this means that the base currency, the US Dollar, equals 108.02 Japanese Yen.

Forex prices are expressed in pips. A pip is simply the minimum increment that a currency pair price can change. For example, if the EUR/USD price changes from 1.3790 to 1.3791, the prices is said to have gone up by 1 pip.

Forex pair quotes are on a bid-ask basis. The bid is the price that the market is willing to pay a seller at a point in time for a specific currency pair. The ask is the price that the market is willing to sell to a buyer at a [point in time for a specific currency pair. The difference between the bid and the ask is called the bid/ask spread.

Forex prices are always listed as Bid price first, Ask price second.

For example, a typical EUR/USD quote coule be 1.3784 Bid // 1.3787 Ask in which case the quote price is said to have a spread of 3 pips.

The spread is how market makers are compensated, as opposed to ‘commissions’ paid for trading stocks or options. The spread can and will vary depending upon a number of factors, including but not limited to: current market conditions, the specific broker or market maker you use (some do charge higher spreads than others), the currency pair being traded (more thinly traded currencies often have higher spreads).

For the EUR/USD example above, the quote would be expressed simply as 1.3784/1.3787 or 1.3784/87.

Much like buying shares of stock, Forex trades in ‘Lots’. There different types of lots, including: standard, mini and micro.

Standard lots trade 100,000 units of a currency pair. Mini lots trade 10,000 units and micro lots trade 1,000 units.

For example, for a standard lot purchase, if the EUR/USD quote was 1.3784/1.3787, then buying this pair would mean buying 100,000 Euro dollars and selling short 137,870 US Dollars.

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Forex 101 – Bid Ask Spread

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Forex knows two prices, the bid price and the ask price.
These prices don’t favor you, the trader. They favor the broker instead, because that’s how he makes his money.

The ask price is what you pay should you wish to purchase that currency pair. Using the EUR/USD as an example, let’s say you believe the EUR is going to strengthen against the U.S. dollar, meaning that the chart of the two currencies is going to go up on the graph.

In such a trade you would be purchasing the EUR  now at a lower rate (and by definition, selling the dollar) so that you can sell it later at its (hopefully) higher rate. And, since the EUR  is the base currency and it controls the direction of the trade, to purchase the EUR means to purchase the currency pair. Such a trade is called opening a long position.

The bid price is the exact opposite: it’s what you pay should you wish to sell, or short, that currency pair. To continue the example of the EUR/USD, let’s say you believe the U.S. dollar is going to strengthen against the EUR, rather than the other way around. In this trade, you would be purchasing the dollar now (and selling the EUR) in order to sell it later.

But remember, it’s the base currency that controls the direction of the trade. When you purchase the cross currency, by definition you’re selling the base; in other words, you’re selling the currency pair rather than buying it. So all the signals are reversed: the chart will go down on the graph and the price of the currency pair will decrease.

But because you sold or shorted the currency pair rather than purchased it, you want the price to decrease, because it’s the price of the base currency that’s going down while the price of the cross is going up. In our example, if you shorted the EUR/USD, you would earn a profit if the price of the pair went down.

Calculating the number of pips you earn in a short trade is the same as for a long trade. Just ignore which was the purchase or the sale price, and subtract the lower number from the higher one. The difference is the amount of your gain.

Note that the ask price is always higher than the bid. You have no choice but to buy high and sell low when trading on the Forex market.

The difference between the bid and the ask is called the spread, and that’s the amount of money the broker takes as his commission. (Yes, that’s all most brokers take. They make their profit on a large volume of trades rather than on large commissions.)

Obviously, the smaller the spread, the more money you get to keep out of what you make. Spreads are competitive among brokers, and to keep their spreads small is one means of attracting customers.

The spreads among the most popular currency pairs are generally smaller than those for pairs that aren’t as commonly traded, which is one of the best reasons for sticking with the “majors,” as they’re called.
These are the  “majors”: USD, EUR, JPY, CHF, GBP, AUD.
These six major currencies provide the bulk of all the Forex trading transactions.
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