Saturday, September 17, 2005

A Profitable Forex Trade - Free Guides

FOREX Training: Example of a Profitable Transaction in FOREX
by forextrading at 02:12AM (EDT) on September 16, 2005 | Permanent Link | Cosmos
To make a profit, in the FOREX, a trader can enter the market as a *buy position* (known as going "long") or a *sell position*(known as going "short").

For discussion, let's assume you've been studying the EURO.

Your trading methods, rules, strategies, etc., tell you that prices will rise during a particular timeframe. So you buy the EUR/USD pair (or, technically, you will simultaneously buy euros, the base currency, and sell dollars).

You open up your handy trading station software (provided to you for free by the online broker), which resides on your desktop, and you see that the EUR/USD pair is trading at:

<< EUR/USD: 1.3242/45 >>

REMEMBER: the quote to the left of the / (1.3242) refers to the bid or "sell" price (what you obtain in USD when you sell EUR). The quote to the right of the / (1.3245) is used to obtain the ask or "buy" price (what you have to pay in USD if you buy EUR).

So, since you believe that the market price for the EUR/USD pair will go higher, you will enter a *buy position* in the market. For simplicities sake, let's say you bought one lot at 1.3245. As long as you sell back the pair at a higher price, then you make money.

But, no worries. This seemingly elaborate process is handled, and even calculated for you, via the broker's software mentioned above. The chart software and the quote board are in agreement with all sides of the currencies.

To illustrate a typical FX SELL trade, consider this scenario involving the USD/JPY currency pair:

REMEMBER ~ Selling ("going short") the currency pair implies selling the first, base currency, and buying the second, quote currency. You sell the currency pair if you believe the base currency (USD) will go down relative to the quote currency (JPY), or equivalently, that the quote currency (JPY) will go up relative to the base currency (USD).

NOTE: while the Profit Calculations, on the Short-sell trade scenario below, may seem somewhat complicated if you've never been in the FOREX market before, trust us when we say, "this process is nearly seamless through your broker trade station (software). We're just showing you this thought-process below so you can SEE how a PROFIT occurs even when

SELLING a currency pair.

The current bid/ask price for USD/JPY is 105.26/105.30, meaning you can buy $1 US for 105.30 Japanese YEN or sell $1 US for 105.26 YEN.

Suppose you decide that the US Dollar (USD) is overvalued against the YEN (JPY). To execute this strategy, you would sell Dollars (simultaneously buying YEN), and then wait for the exchange rate to rise.

So you make the trade: selling US $100,000 and purchasing 10,526,000 YEN. (Remember, at 1% margin, your initial margin deposit would be $1,000.)

As you expected, USD/JPY falls to 104.26/104.30, meaning you can now buy $1 US for $104.30 Japanese YEN or sell $1 US for 104.26

Since you're short dollars (and are long YEN), you must now buy dollars and sell back the YEN to realize any profit.

You buy US $100,000 at the current USD/JPY rate of 104.30, and receive 10,430,000 YEN. Since you originally bought(paid for) 10,526,000 YEN, your profit is 96,000 YEN.

To calculate your P&L in terms of US dollars, simply divide 96,000 by the current USD/JPY rate of 104.30.

Total profit = US $920.42

Roger McAffery is a freelance writer with articles published in a number of places. You can learn more about Forex trading and its great advantages over other kind of business by clicking here:
Forex Training.

Friday, September 16, 2005

Online Investing: A Huge Scammer's Paradise

Daily, anyone interested in investing into any type of financial market who also needs or would like some training in the field is bombarded with all sorts of outrageous claims from every forex training course peddler and every stock trading software dealer - both of whom promise the best return on investment. Even those who claim to offer free forex training are often only luring a potential customer in (which in many cases should be read as victim). I write this today becuase I feel that many of the training courses, books, forex seminars, etc. are a disgrace - not only for the mentor, but for the trainee as well. I say this because, as consumers, we often fall as prey to scam artists who can only offer one thing: hope.

To me, it seems like most of us would see the light and start recognizing these schemes for what they are - useless and a waste of precious time. I've been upset in the past because it seemed as if I couldn't even follow my own advice. Over and over, I was disappointed in my search for the "best forex system." I see now that my main problem has been hope. I keep hoping that I'll find a way to make this investing thing work. I tried subscription forex signal alerts, stock trading training, and even scalping, but I couldn't seem to find anything that works in the markets I'm primarily interested in (forex and the stock market).

What I've decided today is to stop looking for the holy grail of investing, and to start searching for specific knowledge. I'm not saying all investment training courses are bad, in fact, I recently acquired one that I feel quite confident about, I'm just saying that instead of letting myself get down when something doesn't work, I'm going to try something else, and stay committed to my investment goals. Before, I'd buy a trading system, try it out a couple times, and if it didn't work immediately stop using. Now, I'm going to try to tweak whatever system I'm using, put more research and backtesting into a system before I throw it away, and try to mold my own system to use for in daily forex and stock market operations. This will be my online journal, and I'll record my findings here.

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