Forex: What is the best pair to earn with Swap?

Tuesday, November 19, 2013 , Posted by Ryanita at 5:59 PM

forex 6 majors
 on Learn and talk about Forex Bank, 1927 establishments in Sweden, Banks ...
forex 6 majors image




Pedro P


I want to earn as much as possible with the swap. Please explain to me which pair pays the highest swap.

Thank you.



Answer
I think you are confused and need to define your terms and restate your question.

Are you asking about a currency swap? A swap is generally for companies, not individuals. We, as individuals, use a forex broker to trade currency pairs.

Investopedia explains Currency Swap
For example, suppose a U.S.-based company needs to acquire Swiss francs and a Swiss-based company needs to acquire U.S. dollars. These two companies could arrange to swap currencies by establishing an interest rate, an agreed upon amount and a common maturity date for the exchange. Currency swap maturities are negotiable for at least 10 years, making them a very flexible method of foreign exchange.

Currency swaps were originally done to get around exchange controls.

Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/currencyswap.asp#ixzz1fOAgL6Rc

Firms and financial institutions dominate the swaps market, with few (if any) individuals ever participating. Because swaps occur on the OTC market, there is always the risk of a counterparty defaulting on the swap.

Currency swaps have two main uses:

To secure cheaper debt (by borrowing at the best available rate regardless of currency and then swapping for debt in desired currency using a back-to-back-loan).
To hedge against (reduce exposure to) exchange rate fluctuations.

Is one of the above what you're trying to do? If so, give an example so we can be clear and not have to waste our time guessing.

You asked, "I want to earn as much as possible with the swap." As you can see from the "uses" above, the objective of a swap is not to "earn as much as possible."

If not a swap, then you are probably asking "what is the best currency pair to speculate on in order to make money?" You want to trade currencies, and you're asking which currency pair makes or "pays" the highest return?

Are you a trader? Or are you new to Forex? Once again, I have to guess you're a newbie. A trader focuses on risk, not potential profits.

Whatever your question relates to, you don't seem to realize that "best" is a relative term, that means something different to each and every trader. The highest volatility pair may have the biggest price swings, but may not be "best" for trading or your account.

For me, a prerequisite to trading is liquidity. That means I don't trade the rare crosses or at illiquid times of the day -- I don't trade the Asian session, for example.

Define your terms on Investopedia.com.

Maybe the following will help:
Currency Trading â FOREX â Foreign Currency Exchange

1.EUR/USD - Euro/U.S. Dollar
2.GBP/USD - Great British Pound/U.S. Dollar
3.USD/CHF â- U.S. Dollar/Swiss Franc
4.USD/JPY â- U.S. Dollar/Japanese Yen
5.USD/CAD â- U.S. Dollar/Canadian Dollar
6.AUD/USD - Australian Dollar/U.S. Dollar
7.EUR/GBP - Euro/Great British Pound
8.EUR/JPY - Euro/Japanese Yen
9.EUR/CHF - Euro/Swiss Franc
10.GBP/CHF - Great British Pound/Swiss Franc
11.GBP/JPY - Great British Pound/Japanese Yen
12.CHF/JPY - Swiss Franc/Japanese Yen
13.NZD/USD - New Zealand Dollar/US Dollar
14.EUR/CAD - Euro/Canadian Dollar
15.AUD/CAD - Australian Dollar/Canadian Dollar
16.AUD/JPY - Australian Dollar/Japanese Yen
17.EUR/AUD - Euro/Australian Dollar

NOTE: Of the above 17 currency pairs, six of them are deemed the âmajor currency pairsâ in the FOREX market because they account for about 80 percent of FOREX transactions:

1.EUR/USD - Euro/U.S. Dollar
2.GBP/USD - Great British Pound/U.S. Dollar
3.USD/CHF â- U.S. Dollar/Swiss Franc
4.USD/JPY â- U.S. Dollar/Japanese Yen
5.USD/CAD â- U.S. Dollar/Canadian Dollar
6.AUD/USD - Australian Dollar/U.S. Dollar

As you can see, there is a currency on the left and one on the right. The one on the left is referred to as the base, and the one listed on the right is known as the cross. The format, once again, is as follows. BASE/CROSS, or EUR/USD. The EUR is the BASE and the USD is the CROSS.

TERMINOLOGY:
â¢PIPS- Price Interest Point. This is the smallest unit price for any Foreign Currency.
â¢LOT- A lot of currency is one denomination for a trade (100K or mini account). This is similar to purchasing one stock or one contract in the futures market.
â¢LONG to buy
â¢SHORT to sell
â¢BID-The price at which you sell
â¢ASK-The price at which you buy

Price Interest Point - (PIP)
Profits are made in the FOREX by gaining PIPS. A pip is the last digit from the decimal point. This value is 1/100th of a cent. You may now be asking yourself, how do I make money off of 1/100th of a cent? The answer is leverage. The FOREX market is highly leveraged and should be respected. That said, it can also provide for a tremendous return on your investment. The average leverage in the FOREX is 100 to 1. Basically this indicates that for every dollar you invest in a trade you are controlling $100 of value.

Is EUR/USD the best currency to trade in forex?




Stuart


I want to start trading in forex, therefore just want to know which curreny is beneficial at this point of time.


Answer
The EUR/USD is the most liquid, most traded currency. I'm not sure what you consider to be "best." We tend to trade whatever is moving at the moment.

There are six currency pairs that are deemed the âmajor currency pairsâ in the FOREX market because they account for about 80 percent of FOREX transactions:

1. EUR/USD - Euro/U.S. Dollar
2. GBP/USD - Great British Pound/U.S. Dollar
3. USD/CHF â- U.S. Dollar/Swiss Franc
4. USD/JPY â- U.S. Dollar/Japanese Yen
5. USD/CAD â- U.S. Dollar/Canadian Dollar
6. AUD/USD - Australian Dollar/U.S. Dollar

As you can see, there is a currency on the left and one on the right. The one on the left is referred to as the base, and the one listed on the right is known as the cross. The format, once again, is as follows. BASE/CROSS, or EUR/USD. The EUR is the BASE and the USD is the CROSS.

In the case of your question concerning the EUR/USD pair, it's simpler to think in terms of being long first. If you are long the pair, you are long the base currency(EUR) and short the cross (USD) simultaneously. Being short would be the reverse of that.

If yo are short the EUR/USD pair, you are short the base currency (EUR - betting it will go down in price, or go down more than the USD), and long the cross currency (USD - betting it will go up in price, or go up more than the EUR).

TERMINOLOGY:
⢠PIPS- Price Interest Point. This is the smallest unit price for any Foreign Currency.
⢠LOT- A lot of currency is one denomination for a trade (100K or mini account). This is similar to purchasing one stock or one contract in the futures market.
⢠LONG to buy
⢠SHORT to sell
⢠BID-The price at which you sell
⢠ASK-The price at which you buy
Price Interest Point - (PIP)
Profits are made in the FOREX by gaining PIPS. A pip is the last digit from the decimal point. This value is 1/100th of a cent. You may now be asking yourself, how do I make money off of 1/100th of a cent? The answer is leverage. The FOREX market is highly leveraged and should be respected. That said, it can also provide for a tremendous return on your investment. The average leverage in the FOREX is 100 to 1. Basically this indicates that for every dollar you invest in a trade you are controlling $100 of value.

Calculated PIP
Calculated PIP â shows the Price Interest Point (PIP) value for the selected currency pair based upon your trading account margin. For example, a standard 1 percent margin trading account controlling $100,000 in currency would show the EUR/USD with a PIP value of 10.
PIP VALUE-Fixed or Floating
FIXED- When the USD is the cross currency (right side of the pair), the PIP value is fixed at $10 in a 100k account.
FOATING- When the USD is the base currency (left side of the pair), the PIP value is based upon the exchange rate of the cross currency (i.e., USD/CAD.). Also, the PIP value is floating when the pair consists of foreign currencies (i.e., EUR/ GBP).
LOT
A lot is the normal unit of trading in the FOREX market. Trades are made in lot increments, similar to share increments in the stock market.
Standard (or 100k) FOREX account- has a 100:1 leverage ratio
1 LOT= $1,000 investment= ratio leveraged 100 to 1, which = $100,000 in buying power.
Mini FOREX account- has a 200:1 leverage ratio
1 LOT= $50 investment= ratio leveraged 200 to 1, which = $10,000 in buying power.
TRADING HOURS (EST)
⢠Trades 24 hours a day, 6 days a week. The market is open from Sunday at 5pm EST to Friday at 4pm EST.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Currently have 0 comments: