Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Foreign Currencies is a high risk investment!

Trading foreign exchange/Forex involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. Let it be known that trading foreign exchange on margin carries a HIGH LEVEL OF RISK. Before deciding to trade foreign exchange you should carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite. The possibility exists that you could sustain a loss of some or all of your equity and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose! You should be aware of all the risks associated with foreign exchange trading, and seek advice from an independent financial advisor if you have any doubts.

Pro FXI is past results are not indicative of future performance. Pro FXI offers no guarantee that an individual making trades based on our buying signals will experience the same results posted on www.profxi.com. The trading signals given on Pro FXI are not guaranteed to be suitable or profitable for you.

CFTC RULE 4. 41 -- HYPOTHETICAL OR SIMULATED PERFORMANCE RESULTS HAVE CERTAIN LIMITATIONS. UNLIKE AN ACTUAL PERFORMANCE RECORD, SIMULATED RESULTS DO NOT REPRESENT ACTUAL TRADING. ALSO, SINCE THE TRADES HAVE NOT BEEN EXECUTED, THE RESULTS MAY HAVE UNDER-OR-OVER COMPENSATED FOR THE IMPACT, IF ANY, OF CERTAIN MARKET FACTORS, SUCH AS LACK OF LIQUIDITY. SIMULATED TRADING PROGRAMS IN GENERAL ARE ALSO SUBJECT TO THE FACT THAT THEY ARE DESIGNED WITH THE BENEFIT OF HINDSIGHT. NO REPRESENTATION IS BEING MADE THAT ANY ACCOUNT WILL OR IS LIKELY TO ACHIEVE PROFIT OR LOSSES SIMILAR TO THOSE SHOWN.

1.Buy Signal Disclaimer:-

These recommendations and buy signals are for demonstration purposes only. You must do your own research and make your own investment decisions. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. Before Forex trading you should understand the risks associated with these trades including the potential loss of the entire premium paid. No representation is made that any account is likely to achieve profits or losses as indicated in our trade history. Pro FXI and its owners are not liable for any losses, monetary or otherwise, that result from the content of this and any website, newsletter, blog, or chat room published by Pro FXI. Please realize the risk with any investment and consult investment professionals before proceeding.

2. Market Opinions:-

Any opinions, news, research, analyses, prices, or other information contained on this Pro FXI website is provided as general market commentary, and does not constitute investment advice. Pro FXI will not accept liability for any loss or damage, including, and without limitation to, any loss of profit, which may arise directly or indirectly from use of or reliance on such information.

3. Internet Trading Risks:-

There are risks associated with utilizing an Internet-based deal execution trading system including, but not limited to, the failure of hardware, software, and Internet connection. Because Pro FXI cannot control signal power, its reception or routing via Internet, configuration of your equipment or reliability of its connection, we cannot be responsible for communication failures, distortions or delays when trading via the Internet.

4. Accuracy of Information:- The content on this website is subject to change at any time without notice, and is provided for the sole purpose of assisting traders to make independent investment decisions. Pro FXI does not guarantee the accuracy, and will not accept liability for any loss or damage which may arise directly or indirectly from the content or your inability to access the website, for any delay in or failure of the transmission or the receipt of any instruction or notifications sent through this website.

The content of ProFXI.com is not intended for distribution, or use by, any person in any country where such distribution or use would be contrary to local law or regulation. None of the services or investments referred to in ProFXI.com are available to persons residing in any country where the provision of such services or investments would be contrary to local law or regulation. It is your responsibility to ascertain the terms of and comply with any local law or regulation to which you may be subject.

5. Additional Risk Disclosure Information:-

In addition, it is important to understand and accept that there can be data outages and server failures. The brokers system might not be functional, the auto trading servers might have technical difficulties and there may be times where communication between accounts, the broker and the auto-trade program are not functioning properly. This can lead to greater risk. Forex markets also do not always guarantee exact fills. Periods of fast markets can cause greater degrees of slippage and less than ideal fills. There can be no guarantee that your account will always be able to enter and exit at the programs ideal entry or exit point.

You agree to indemnify and hold Pro FXI, and its officers, agents, co-branders or other partners, and employees, harmless from any claim arising from your use of the Service or your connection to the Service. Pro FXI and its affiliates shall not be held liable for any trading losses as a result of your use of the broadcast research found herein.

6. Disclaimer Of Warranties:- You expressly understand and agree that your use of the Service is at your sole risk. The Service is provided on an "As Is" and "As Available" basis. Pro FXI expressly disclaims all warranties of any kind, expressed or implied, including, but not limited to the foregoing. Pro FXI makes no warranty that the Service will meet your requirements, or that the Service will be uninterrupted, timely, secure, or error-free, or that the results that may be obtained from the use of the Service will be accurate or reliable, or the quality of any products, services, information, or other material purchased or obtained by you through the Service will meet your expectations. No advice or information, whether oral or written, obtained by you from Pro FXI or through or from the Service shall create any warranty not expressly stated in the Terms of Service.

7. Terms Of Service, Entire Agreement:-

The Terms of Service constitute the entire agreement between you and Pro FXI and govern the use of the Service. The Terms of Service and the relationship between you and Pro FXI shall be governed by the laws of the United States of America. The failure of Pro FXI to exercise or enforce any right or provision of the Terms of Service shall not constitute a waiver of such right or provision. All content provided through ProFXI.com is owned by and/or licensed to ProFXI.com and/or its affiliates and protected by United States and international copyright laws. ProFXI.com and its licensors retain all proprietary rights to such content, which may not be reproduced, transmitted or distributed without prior written consent from ProFXI.com. All trademarks, service marks, trade names, logos, and graphics displayed in ProFXI.com are registered trademarks of ProFXI. com and/or its affiliates in the United States and other countries. You may not make any use of such marks without prior written consent from ProFXI.com.

Forex Blog

We are pleased to announce that VeriteFX will be guest hosting our blog for the first half of 2009. They will post forex trading signals and provide readers with valuable market guidance. Those of you who follow our blog, will already know that VeriteF is moderated by the same team that previously handled ProFXI and we glad to have Davids valuable forex sxpertise and advice on our forex blog.

We at Forex Justice hope you will submit at least on review about A forex company that you have had an experience with - good or bad. Doing so will help keep this site free and will grant you access to our forex blog. If you are interested in hosting our forex blog in the future, please email Tony at info@forexjustice.com with your trading credentials and currency trading experience.

We look forward to hosting several experienced forex experts as time goes on.

By registering at ForexJustice.com you agree to be in acceptance of our disclaimer. as well as accepting the ProFXI Risk Warning associated with trading foreign exchange and currencies.

Things You Should Know About Forex Trading

How difficult is it to make money trading the Forex market? How much time does it take to actually be able to make a living trading the Forex market? These and other important aspects of trading are to be discussed in this article.

Trading the Forex market has many benefits over other financial markets, among the most important are: superior liquidity, 24hrs market, better execution, and others. Traders and investor see the Forex market as a new speculation or diversifying opportunity because of these benefits. Does this mean that it is easy to make money trading the Forex Market? Not at all.

Forex brokers agree that 90% of traders end up losing money, 5% of traders end up at break even and only 5% of them achieve consistent profitable results. With these statistics shown, I don’t consider trading to be an easy task. But, is it harder to master any other endeavor? I don’t think so, consider musicians, writers, or even other businesses, the success rates are about the same, there are a whole bunch of them who never got to the top.

Now that we know it is not easy to achieve consistent profitable results, a must question would be, Why is it that some traders succeed while others fail to trade successfully in the Forex market? There is no hard answer to this question, or a recipe to follow to achieve consistent profitable results. What we do know is that traders that reach the top think different. That’s right, they don’t follow the crowd, they are an independent part of the crowd.

A few things that separate the top traders from the rest are

1. Education:-

They are very well educated in the matter; they have chosen to learn every single and important aspect of trading. The best traders know that every trade is a learning experience. They approach the Forex market with humility, otherwise the market will prove them wrong.

2. Forex trading system:-

Top traders have a Forex trading system. They have the discipline to follow it rigorously, because they know that only the trades that are signaled by their system have a greater rate of success.

3. Price behavior:-

They have incorporated price behavior into their trading systems. They know price action has the last word.

4. Money management:-

Avoiding the risk of ruin is a primary subject to the best traders. After all, you cannot succeed without funds in your trading account.

5. Trading psychology:-

They are aware of every psychological issue that affects the decisions made by traders. They have accepted the fact that every individual trade has two probable outcomes, not just the winning side.

These are, among others, the most important factors that influence the success rate of Forex traders.

We know now that it is not easy to make money trading the Forex market, but it is possible. We also discussed the most important factors that influence the rate of success of Forex traders. But, how much time does it take to have consistent profitable results? It is different from trader to trader. For some, it could take a life time, and still don’t get the desired results, for some others, a few years are enough to get consistent profitable results. The answer to this question may vary, but what I want to make clear here is that trading successfully is a process, it’s not something you can do in a short period of time.

Trading successfully is no easy task; it is a process and could take years to achieve the desired results. There are a few things though every trader should take in consideration that could accelerate the process: having a trading system, using money management, education, being aware of psychological issues, discipline to follow your trading system and your trading plan, and others.

Trading characteristics

There is no unified or centrally cleared market for the majority of FX trades, and there is very little cross-border regulation. Due to the over-the-counter (OTC) nature of currency markets, there are rather a number of interconnected marketplaces, where different currencies instruments are traded. This implies that there is not a single exchange rate but rather a number of different rates (prices), depending on what bank or market maker is trading, and where it is. In practice the rates are often very close, otherwise they could be exploited by arbitrageurs instantaneously. Due to London's dominance in the market, a particular currency's quoted price is usually the London market price. A joint venture of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and Reuters, called Fxmarketspace opened in 2007 and aspired but failed to the role of a central market clearing mechanism.

The main trading center is London, but New York, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore are all important centers as well. Banks throughout the world participate. Currency trading happens continuously throughout the day; as the Asian trading session ends, the European session begins, followed by the North American session and then back to the Asian session, excluding weekends.

Fluctuations in exchange rates are usually caused by actual monetary flows as well as by expectations of changes in monetary flows caused by changes in gross domestic product (GDP) growth, inflation (purchasing power parity theory), interest rates (interest rate parity, Domestic Fisher effect, International Fisher effect), budget and trade deficits or surpluses, large cross-border M&A deals and other macroeconomic conditions. Major news is released publicly, often on scheduled dates, so many people have access to the same news at the same time. However, the large banks have an important advantage; they can see their customers' order flow.

Currencies are traded against one another. Each pair of currencies thus constitutes an individual product and is traditionally noted XXX/YYY, where YYY is the ISO 4217 international three-letter code of the currency into which the price of one unit of XXX is expressed (called base currency). For instance, EUR/USD is the price of the euro expressed in US dollars, as in 1 euro = 1.5465 dollar. Out of convention, the first currency in the pair, the base currency, was the stronger currency at the creation of the pair. The second currency, counter currency, was the weaker currency at the creation of the pair.

The factors affecting XXX will affect both XXX/YYY and XXX/ZZZ. This causes positive currency correlation between XXX/YYY and XXX/ZZZ.

On the spot market, according to the BIS study, the most heavily traded products were:

EUR/USD: 27%
USD/JPY: 13%
GBP/USD (also called sterling or cable): 12%

and the US currency was involved in 86.3% of transactions, followed by the euro (37.0%), the yen (17.0%), and sterling (15.0%) (see table). Note that volume percentages should add up to 200%: 100% for all the sellers and 100% for all the buyers.

Trading in the euro has grown considerably since the currency's creation in January 1999, and how long the foreign exchange market will remain dollar-centered is open to debate. Until recently, trading the euro versus a non-European currency ZZZ would have usually involved two trades: EUR/USD and USD/ZZZ. The exception to this is EUR/JPY, which is an established traded currency pair in the interbank spot market. As the dollar's value has eroded during 2008, interest in using the euro as reference currency for prices in commodities (such as oil), as well as a larger component of foreign reserves by banks, has increased dramatically. Transactions in the currencies of commodity-producing countries, such as AUD, NZD, CAD, have also increased.

Forex history

In 1967, a Chicago bank refused a college professor by the name of Milton Friedman a loan in pound sterling because he had intended to use the funds to short the British currency. Friedman, ho had perceived sterling to be priced too high against the dollar, wanted to sell the currency, then later buy it back to repay the bank after the currency declined, thus pocketing a quick profit. The bank's refusal to grant the loan was due to the Bretton Woods Agreement, established twenty years earlier, which fixed national currencies against the dollar, and set the dollar at a rate of per ounce of gold.

The Bretton Woods Agreement, set up in 1944, aimed at installing international monetary stability by preventing money from fleeing across nations, and restricting speculation in the world currencies Prior to the Agreement, the gold exchange standard--prevailing between 1876 and World War I--dominated the international economic system. Under the gold. exchange, currencies gained a new phase of stability as they were backed by the price of gold. It abolished the age-old practice used by kings and rulers of arbitrarily debasing money and triggering inflation. But the gold exchange standard didn't lack faults. As an economy strengthened, it would import heavily from abroad until it ran down its gold reserves required to back its money. As a result, money supply would shrink, interest rates rose and economic activity slowed to the extent of recession. Ultimately, prices of goods had hit bottom, appearing attractive to other nations, which would rush into buying sprees that injected the economy with gold until it increased its money supply, and drive down interest rates and recreate wealth into the economy. Such boom-bust patterns prevailed throughout the gold standard until the outbreak of World War I interrupted trade flows and the free movement of gold.

After the Wars, the Bretton Woods Agreement was founded, where participating countries agreed to try and maintain the value of their currency with a narrow margin against the dollar and a corresponding rate of gold as needed. Countries were prohibited from devaluing their currencies to their trade advantage and were only allowed to do so for devaluations of less than 10%. Into the 1950s, the ever-expanding volume of international trade led to massive movements of capital generated by post-war construction. That destabilized foreign exchange rates as set up in Bretton Woods.

The Agreement was finally abandoned in 1971, and the US dollar would no longer be convertible into gold. By 1973, currencies of major industrialized nations became more freely floating, controlled mainly by the forces of supply and demand which acted in the foreign exchange market. Prices were floated daily, with volumes, speed and price volatility all increasing throughout the 1970s, giving rise to new financial instruments, market deregulation and trade liberalization.

In the 1980s, cross-border capital movements accelerated with the advent of computers and technology, extending market continuum through Asian, European and American time zones. Transactions in foreign exchange rocketed from about billion a day in the 1980s, to more than .5 trillion a day two decades later

Monday, August 24, 2009

Extreme Leverage

What is Leverage?

Leverage is the ability to make large trades in the market with only a small amount of actual capital in your account. Forex brokers offer leverage as a way to make the market accessible to the average investor. Most traders don’t have 10k to get started with forex trading. If a forex broker provided a trader with leverage of $200 to every $1 deposited(200:1 leverage), it would only take a deposit of $50 to open and control a 10k trade.

How Can Leverage Hurt You?

Leverage can be a sharp double edged sword. It can work for you, or against you. If you make a trade with a mini trading lot of 10k, each pip would be worth around $1. If you gain 5 pips, everything is great, you used $50 and made a 10% return. If you lose 5 pips, you have a 10% loss just as fast.
While it is really nice to think about the money you can make, the money that can be lost is rarely discussed . Leverage can be very dangerous if used improperly. Brokers can offer heavy leverage, but that doesn’t mean that you are forced to use it all the time.

Using Extreme Leverage:-

While looking for a broker you will discover that there are brokers out there that offer extreme leverage. Some brokers will even offer you 400:1 leverage. This would allow you to open an account with $300, and use that same amount to control up to 120k worth of trades. The average pip size with a trade of 120k is $12.00. If your trade lost 25 pips, your entire account would be wiped out. Considering that most currency pairs can move 25 pips in less than 10 seconds, that sounds pretty dangerous doesn’t it?

Using Leverage as a Tool:-

The dangers of using too much leverage are rarely talked about, but are pretty obvious if you think about it. This doesn’t mean that you have to use the full amount of leverage just because it’s there. In fact, there are ways to use leverage in useful ways that will give you an advantage.
A good time to use leverage is when adding to a winning trade. If you have a trade that has progressed favorably and you want to add to it, this is a good use of leverage. This is called leveraging your profits.

Overall the best use of leverage is when position trading. It’s tempting to use extreme leverage to make a fast profit on single trades, but the risks are just not worth it.

Do I need good credit to trade on margin?

You do not have to have good credit to be able to trade on margin. Brokers are more than happy to give you margin to trade on because it is part of how they make their money. Brokers make their money by collecting the spread and the larger your trade is on the market, the more the spread is worth.By giving you margin to trade on, the broker is able to collect more money from your account per trade.