Friday, December 25, 2009

Types of Trading In ForexGen


With ForexGen Broker There are 2 basic types of analysis you can take when approaching the forex:
1. Fundamental analysis
2. Technical analysis.
There has always been a constant debate as to which analysis is better, but to tell you the truth, you need to know a little bit of both. So let’s break each one down and then come back and put them together.

The Right Green Fund

Mutual funds are supposed to simplify investing, but it doesn't always work out that way. Let's say you're looking for a fund that invests in green technologies. There are dozens of choices, including exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which track narrow indexes in everything from wind power to potable water. The catch? Most are as new and unproven as the companies they invest in. So we set out to find funds with experienced managers and established records. First, we asked research firm Lipper to produce a list of green funds. Then we excluded those with less than five years' performance or less than $100 million in assets. That left us with just three contenders - a slim field, to be sure - but these veterans offer a range of options for different risk appetites.

Unexpectedly Cuts Rates of SNB

The Swiss central bank unexpectedly cut its main lending rate by 50 basis points and said the economy may contract next year.
The central bank, led by Jean-Pierre Roth, lowered its three-month Libor target to 2 percent today from 2.5 percent, it said in a faxed statement from Zurich. The SNB wasn’t scheduled to decide on interest rates until December11.
The Bank of England today cut its main interest rate by 150 basis points as policy makers tried to keep the economy from tipping into recession.
Today’s action is the bank’s second inter-meeting cut in a month, as the financial market crisis causes stocks to plunge and forces governments to buy troubled assets. UBS AG, Switzerland’s biggest bank, got a $59.2 billion aid package Oct. 16 after piling up the biggest losses of any European lender from the global credit crisis.
The franc fell against the euro and dollar after the SNB’s announcement. The Swiss currency weakened to 1.5022 per euro by 1:13pm in Zurich. Against the dollar, the franc slipped to 1.1698 from 1.1580.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Trading Strategies and Types

Forwards:
In this transaction, money does not change hands until some agreed upon date in the future . The buyer and seller agree on an exchange rate for any date in the future, and the transaction occurs on that date, regardless of what the market rates are then. The duration of the trade can be anywhere from a few days to several years.
Futures:
Futures are forward transactions with standard contract sizes and maturity dates. The average contract length is approximately 3 months. Futures contracts are usually inclusive of interest.

Swaps:

The most common type of forward transaction is the currency swap. In a swap, two parties agree to exchange currencies for a certain length of time and reverse the transaction at a later date. These are not contracts, are not traded through an exchange and not generally available to the retail trader.

Spot:
A two-day delivery transaction, as opposed to the futures contracts, which are usually three months. This trade represents a “direct exchange” between two currencies, has the shortest time frame, involves cash rather than a contract; and interest is not included.

Low Spread Forex Traders


1-Spreads in Forex Trading
The BID price is the price at which a client can sell a unit of the base currency (in return for buying the secondary currency) and the ASK/OFFER price is the price at which a client can buy a unit of the base currency. For example, if the quote for the exchange rate of the Euro/U.S. Dollar in the market is1.2583/1.2586, this means that the client can pay $1.2586 in order to buy one Euro (the base currency) and will receive $1.2583 if one Euro is sold. The BID price is lower than the ASK price and the difference or 'spread' between the two numbers is measured in 'pips' (3 pips here) and represents the profit of the dealing room or trading house.

2-Commissions or Spreads
Brokers take part or all of the spread in all currency pairs traded. Here is an example:
EUR/USD. Prices are always quoted with both bid and offer prices ( Buy EUR/USD 1.2000, Sell EUR/USD 1.2003). That difference of 3 pips is the spread and can amount to a substantial amount of money. Because the standard lot is 100,000 units of the base currency, 3 pips on EUR/USD means $30 paid to the broker. A pip is the smallest amount the currency is traded in - 1/100th of a percent in the case of the US dollar. The currency pairs are always purchased by buying 100,000 of the quote currency , also known as the counter currency. For the pair EUR/USD, the base currency is USD, therefore 1/100th of a percent on a pair with USD as the base currency will always have a pip of $10. If, on the other hand, your currency has British Pounds as a base instead of US dollars, then 1/100th of a percent is now worth around $20, because you are buying 100,000 units of British pounds. Retail forex brokers make a lot of money without charging commissions

U.K. Average Earnings

U.K. Average Earnings Index Actual 3.1%, Expected 3.3%, Previous 3.3%

Release Explanation: This release measures the change in the prices that businesses and governments pay for labor. Although, this report does not take into account all sources of household income but the labor cash earnings does accurately reflect the spending ability of domestic households, which is one of the driving forces of economic growth.

Trade Desk Thoughts: The annual rate of growth in average earnings excluding bonuses was 3.6% in the three months to November 2008, unchanged from the three months to October.

Including bonuses, it was 3.1%, down 0.2 percentage points from the three months to October.
Forex Technical Reaction: From the high reached in the Asian session, the pound tumbled nearly 300 pips during the European trading hours. The bad fundamentals coming out of the U.K. lately has dragged the pair to a 8 year low. Today's news releases produced a weak, as the pair moved only 20 pips.

The Sterling Falls Even Further Against The Dollar On UK Woes

The British pound fell to a record low against the yen and the weakest since 2001 versus the dollar on concern the U.K. recession will deepen, supporting the case for the Bank of England to cut interest rates further. Sterling declined for a fourth day against the euro, the longest stretch since the end of last year, before the BOE releases the minutes of its Jan. 8 meeting at which it reduced its benchmark rate to a record low 1.5 percent. 'The BOE minutes are due tonight and one might expect dovish tones to dominate,' Greg Gibbs, director of foreign- exchange strategy in Sydney at ABN Amro Australia Ltd., wrote in a research note today. The pound is likely to extend its decline toward a 'minor support' level at its 2001 low against the dollar, he said. The GBP/USD is currently trading at $1.3735 as of 8:40am, GMT.

The euro may fall 15 percent against the dollar by mid-year as European banks restrict lending and sovereign bond spreads widen due to the deepening global economic slowdown, BNP Paribas SA said. The 16-nation currency may 'undershoot' the bank's forecasts and touch $1.10 in the second quarter, a level last seen in September 2003, said Hans-Guenter Redeker, global head of foreign-exchange strategy at France's largest bank BNP. The European currency is heading for its third monthly loss after Standard & Poor's downgraded the sovereign credit ratings of Spain and Greece and lowered its outlook for Ireland to negative as government measures to stem the global financial crisis widen budget deficits. The EUR/USD is currently trading at $1.2920 as of 9:05am, GMT.

President Barack Obama's economic team is pushing to complete a bank-rescue plan that can be twinned with the $825 billion stimulus package being negotiated with Congress to alleviate the rapidly deepening financial crisis. While full details of the rescue haven't been settled yet, people familiar with the deliberations said the package is likely to include a $50 billion-plus program to stem foreclosures, fresh injections of capital into the banks and steps to deal with toxic assets clogging lenders' balance sheets. Officials 'feel like they need to move quickly to provide some sense of calmness and assurance to the market that the government isn't going to let this problem get out of hand,' said John Douglas, a partner at the Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker law firm and a former general counsel at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.