Archive

Posts Tagged ‘forex terms’

Basic Forex Terms – Currency Pairs

December 9th, 2009 william No comments

Let’s talk today a bit about another basic forex term – “currency pairs’”

The value of any currency on Forex is determined in relation to the value of all other currencies. In other words, the value of 1 U.S. dollar changes based on whether you are comparing it to the Euro, the Australian dollar, the Japanese Yen and so on.

The buying and selling of any of these currencies is always done in what’s known as currency pairs.

A currency pair consists of a base currency and a quote currency. The base currency is the currency you intended to purchase. The quote currency is the currency you intend to use to purchase the base currency.

Together, the pair shows you how much of the quote currency is needed to buy one ‘unit’ of the base currency.

To illustrate this, let’s look at some exchange rates for December. 15th, 2007. We’ll compare the U.S. Dollar against the Euro, Canadian Dollar and Japanese Yen:

1 EUR = 1.44245 USD       1 USD = 0.69326 EUR

1 CAD = 0.98303 USD      1 USD = 1.01720 CAD

1 JPY = 0.008828 USD     1 USD = 113.275 JPY

The pairs are as follows:

EUR/USD = 1.4  selling Euros to buy Dollars

USD/EUR = 0.69  selling Dollars to buy Euros

CAD/USD = 0.98  selling Canada Dollars to buy U.S. Dollars

USD/CAD = 1.01  selling U.S. Dollars to buy Canada Dollars

JPY/USD = 0.0088 – selling Yen to buy Dollars

USD/JPY = 113.27 – selling Dollars to buy Yen

Notice that the currency being sold is listed first. The EUR/USD pair tells you that for every Euro you sell, you are purchasing 1.4 U.S. Dollars. Likewise, the USD/EUR pair tells you that for every Dollar you sell, you are purchasing 0.69 Euro.

You are always buying and selling simultaneously when you trade currency on Forex.

I hope this makes it a lot clearer….

Till next time…

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Forex For Beginners – Basic Forex Terms

November 24th, 2009 william No comments

Today, we’re going to start to introduce you to basic forex terms. First, we’ll explain what the term “exchange rate” means

“Exchange Rate” can be defined as the price of one currency in relation to another.

A fixed exchange rate, like the one established in 1944 by the Bretton Woods Accord, is an official rate set by monetary authorities (and sometimes governments).

Fixed rates are typically set to a pre-determined value (e.g., the price of an ounce of gold), and allowed only slight fluctuation.

A floating exchange rate is what is in effect on the foreign exchange market today. This type of rate is not set to any outside reference point. Rather, the rate is determined by the market forces of supply and demand.

Tomorrow, our next concept: “Currency Pairs”

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Close
E-mail It