FOREX EXPLANATION
1.
What is Forex?
The foreign exchange market
is the "place" where currencies are traded. Currencies are important
to most people around the world, whether they realize it or not, because
currencies need to be exchanged in order to conduct foreign trade and business.
If you are living in the U.S. and want to buy cheese from France, either you or
the company that you buy the cheese from has to pay the French for the cheese
in euros (EUR). This means that the U.S. importer would have to exchange the
equivalent value of U.S. dollars (USD) into euros. The same goes for traveling.
A French tourist in Egypt can't pay in euros to see the pyramids because it's
not the locally accepted currency. As such, the tourist has to exchange the
euros for the local currency, in this case the Egyptian pound, at the current
exchange rate.
The need to exchange
currencies is the primary reason why the forex market is the largest, most
liquid financial market in the world. It dwarfs other markets in size, even the
stock market, with an average traded value of around U.S. $2,000 billion per
day. (The total volume changes all the time, but as of August 2012, the Bank
for International Settlements (BIS) reported that the forex market traded in
excess of U.S. $4.9 trillion per day.)
One unique aspect of this
international market is that there is no central marketplace for foreign
exchange. Rather, currency trading is conducted electronically over-the-counter
(OTC), which means that all transactions occur via computer networks between
traders around the world, rather than on one centralized exchange. The market
is open 24 hours a day, five and a half days a week, and currencies are traded
worldwide in the major financial centers of London, New York, Tokyo, Zurich,
Frankfurt, Hong Kong, Singapore, Paris and Sydney - across almost every time
zone. This means that when the trading day in the U.S. ends, the forex market
begins anew in Tokyo and Hong Kong. As such, the forex market can be extremely
active any time of the day, with price quotes changing constantly.
Spot Market and the
Forwards and Futures Markets
There are actually three
ways that institutions, corporations and individuals trade forex: the spot
market, the forwards market and the futures market. The forex trading in the
spot market always has been the largest market because it is the
"underlying" real asset that the forwards and futures markets are
based on. In the past, the futures market was the most popular venue for
traders because it was available to individual investors for a longer period of
time. However, with the advent of electronic trading, the spot market has
witnessed a huge surge in activity and now surpasses the futures market as the
preferred trading market for individual investors and speculators. When people
refer to the forex market, they usually are referring to the spot market. The
forwards and futures markets tend to be more popular with companies that need
to hedge their foreign exchange risks out to a specific date in the future.
2. What
is the spot market?
More specifically, the spot
market is where currencies are bought and sold according to the current price.
That price, determined by supply and demand, is a reflection of many things,
including current interest rates, economic performance, sentiment towards
ongoing political situations (both locally and internationally), as well as the
perception of the future performance of one currency against another. When a
deal is finalized, this is known as a "spot deal". It is a bilateral
transaction by which one party delivers an agreed-upon currency amount to the
counter party and receives a specified amount of another currency at the
agreed-upon exchange rate value. After a position is closed, the settlement is
in cash. Although the spot market is commonly known as one that deals with
transactions in the present (rather than the future), these trades actually
take two days for settlement.
3. What
are the forwards and futures markets?
Unlike the spot market, the
forwards and futures markets do not trade actual currencies. Instead they deal
in contracts that represent claims to a certain currency type, a specific price
per unit and a future date for settlement.
In the forwards market,
contracts are bought and sold OTC between two parties, who determine the terms
of the agreement between themselves.
In the futures market,
futures contracts are bought and sold based upon a standard size and settlement
date on public commodities markets, such as the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. In
the U.S., the National Futures Association regulates the futures market. Futures
contracts have specific details, including the number of units being traded,
delivery and settlement dates, and minimum price increments that cannot be
customized. The exchange acts as a counterpart to the trader, providing
clearance and settlement.
Both types of contracts are
binding and are typically settled for cash for the exchange in question upon
expiry, although contracts can also be bought and sold before they expire. The
forwards and futures markets can offer protection against risk when trading
currencies. Usually, big international corporations use these markets in order
to hedge against future exchange rate fluctuations, but speculators take part
in these markets as well. (For a more in-depth introduction to futures, see
Futures Fundamentals.)
Note that you'll see the
terms: FX, forex, foreign-exchange market and currency market. These terms are
synonymous and all refer to the forex market.
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