Posts Tagged ‘illustration’

The Introduction to Forex Trading Market

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

An introduction to Forex trading must first start with the understanding that Forex is the world’s largest and most liquid trading market and often times considered as the best home business anyone can ever venture into even with the much talked about risks of Forex trading. But trading Forex without understanding what exactly Forex is all about is where majority of the risk falls into. It is no secret that on daily basis more and more investors are shifting from stocks and other financial vehicles such as bonds and commodities to the all-electronic world of Forex trading for income and profit because of its numerous benefits & advantages over traditional trading vehicles such as those mentioned above.

The foreign exchange which is often times referred to as Forex and it is not traded from a central exchange as is the case with stocks. The Forex market is traded over-the-counter (OTC), or the Interbank market. The interbank market is the network of banks which are linked electronically 24 hours and the trade of foreign currency is conducted through these banks.

As an investor in the Forex market what you are doing in essence is simultaneously exchanging on countries currency for another. A good illustration is as follows: GBP/USD -The first currency (in this example, the GBP) is referred to as the base currency and the second (USD) as the counter or quote currency. So if you buy the GBP you are simultaneously selling the USD as shown in the pair above.

Just as on any other market, Forex trading though with an exclusively high potential profitability is essentially risky as well. It is possible to make a living from trading the Forex market, but this must be follow after a certain training including a familiarization with the structure and kinds of currency pairs, the principles of currencies price formation, the factors affecting prices alterations and trading risks levels. Mastering techniques and strategies on how to use technical and fundamental analysis to make your trading decision is a road you definitely can not avoid.

After acquiring the basic knowledge of Forex trading, the next step would be to open a demo trading account and begin to put all you have learned into practice. Only when you have built a strategy that generates consistent profit should you move to a live account.

Karen Fairham regularly contributes informative articles to web sites on Forex trading and stock trading. To read more on forex trading strategies to help you maximise your profit visit: http://www.forexxtrader.blogspot.com

Currency Trading Tips - A Simple Tip to Warn of the Big Moves

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

If you want to enjoy currency trading success, you need to catch and follow trends and spot turning points and this tool will help you - it’s an obvious tip in many respects but most traders simply don’t use it, so here it is.

It’s to look at other markets that impact on the currency you are trading and for the purposes of illustration let’s look at the US Dollar.

The dollar is a net importer of energy and high energy costs hurt it and the main one we are referring to here, is crude oil. In recent history when crude has hit high levels (and we have had recent tests of $100 a barrel) it has hurt the dollar and the retreat from this level has seen the dollar stabilize and rise.

Tops in the oil market recently have warned of dollar rallies.

Another major factor is interest rates.

Recently the dollar has been hurt by the perceived view that interest rates will be cut and you can get an idea of how much by looking at interest rate futures. When the interest rate futures rally too hard to fast and then fall, you can often see the dollar rally.

Why? Because traders get ahead of themselves - the recent rally in dollar euro was preceded by 100% consensus that interest rates will be cut by 50 bps (probably true) but gave 50 - 50 that rates would be cut by 75 bps (unlikely) the level of interest rate cuts factored into the market was overdone and prices in interest rate futures fell and the dollar rallied.

Tops in oil and interest rate futures can be used to warn of dollar rallies.

Another important variable is the stock market. Weak stocks hurt the dollar and strong stock markets support it - so watch it in fact if you want another tip:

If you are trading long term trends and only want to look at the prices of currencies once a day, do it just after the stock market closes. This closing price is always significant and while currencies trade 24 hours they are effectively thinly traded until Tokyo opens and the US stock market close sets the tone for the next day

Other currencies are also affected by outside influences:

The Canadian Dollar - Is a net exporter of oil and high prices of oil and other commodities are supportive of the currency

The Australian Dollar - Australia is a big producer of gold and when gold prices are high it supports the currency.

By looking at other markets that are important to a currency, you can often spot whether trends are going to continue or reverse. While it’s obvious that currencies don’t move in isolation, many traders do not bother to look at other markets for clues - if you do, you can get a trading edge.

A trading edge is what forex trading is all about and if you research this tip further, you will find it very useful as part of your forex trading strategy for bigger profits.

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Financial Terms Might Be Difficult to Comprehend

Monday, October 6th, 2008

Investment, stock exchange, banking, loans, insurance and almost all finance related dealings have a lot of financial terms, which might sound alien to an ordinary user. A financial glossary can be of right help in guiding one to understanding the associated terminologies.

The financial glossary does not stop with just defining the terms rather it explains the frightening financial jargon that is unique to any individual business in related terms. Some financial terms might be difficult to comprehend when it comes to understanding the definitions without graphs, diagrams, tables and illustrations and worked examples. Latest online financial glossary is being published with such guidelines making it pretty comfortable for the end user to understand the concept better than with just a two or three line definition.

Having a financial glossary is the key to getting in touch with the worlds of commerce and economics. Regardless of whether you are a merchant or a student of a business or an investor or just an onlooker it is going to be pretty useful in some form or the other.

If you do not prefer to invest in a financial glossary you can get to use the online versions that are available absolutely for free. You need to have access to one of the final information resources to learn the numbers that make up the reports and also to arrive at the financial statements and analysis report. The financial language in relation to law is different from insurance and from medicine. For in-depth requirements a financial glossary that is compliant and based on a particular field should be considered like a financial glossary for insurance, financial glossary for medicine, financial glossary for education field etcetera.

In order to achieve fiscal stability it is important to understand the many related terms in a financial glossary. Though most of them will be understood and handled by the professional accountant, the owner of the business should get to know them so that he will not be cheated upon by his accountant or worker. An access to a financial glossary can let you have control over the efficiency of the investment and business practice.

Financial glossary can be referenced for many situations like for judging the money requirement for starting up with a business, integrating marketing strategies for the business, determining the life cycle of the product versus the investment required for the process and lot more. Know the value of your money and money management patterns from having an access to a financial glossary.

Hi Readers, I am Anderson, Apart from being a Investment banker I always like to write articles and stories. In the earlier days of my professional carrier, I worked as a freelance writer, now days I am writing some articles on financial glossary and after that I will write for investment terms

Japanese Candlesticks Can Predict Reversal of Major Trend

Saturday, May 31st, 2008

Observing the movement of stock prices in Japanese Candlestick format and in real-time depiction is somewhat akin to watching the printout of an electrocardiogram in motion. One is seeing at first hand the story of an unfolding investor psychology. The first practitioner of Candlestick price representation, so many centuries ago in Japan, was no doubt seeking to develop a strategy or a system of tactics which would deliver to him a trading advantage which would assist him in planning his next moves. The technique of price recordation which he developed was based on the principle of expanding the “line,” or “bar,” on a chart representing the range of prices for a given time period so as to create a fattened-out line, or cylinder, in which the opening price and the closing price for that time period would be the upper and lower limits of the cylinder. If the closing price of the day were higher than the opening price, then the cylinder would not be filled in, or would be left “white;” whereas if the closing price of the day were lower than the opening price, then the cylinder would be filled in, or made “black.”

This style of price display presented a visual picture which was instantly recognized by the eye. It was easy to discern the mood of the rice traders which was in effect during that session; and, depending on the relationship of that particular Candle bar’s relationship to adjacent and nearby bars, the operator had a basis for making a prediction of the direction of prices for the next day.

Furthermore, when interpreted properly in the light of human judgment, the shape of a bar, especially when considered in conjunction with adjacent or nearby bars, was found to possess an ability to forecast a reversal of major trend.

After long and expensive historical research and translation of old records into English, the Candlestick approach to price charting was brought to the Occidental world about 25 years ago. In the early years, the Candles developed a following only very slowly. More recently, however, professional traders and investors, as well as those who do not trade or invest for a living, have begun to appreciate the advantages of the Candlesticks, to the point at which it seems reasonable to predict that they will be the standard within the foreseeable future.

What is so unusual about the Candles? In short, they form patterns which have meaning in terms of revealing traders’ theretofore-hidden investment rationale, and also in terms of allowing forecasts to be made regarding the future course of price action. Some of these visual formations or images are useful in foretelling the end of a trend and a possible topping out and rollover to the downside (if the major trend has been one of increasing prices) or of bottoming out and rolling to the upside (if the major trend has been one of declining prices).

At the top of an extended rising market, one of the more dependable reversal patterns is the “Evening Star,” a three-bar pattern in which the first bar is a tall white bar; the middle bar is a small “Star” which usually sits higher than the first bar; and the third bar is a tall black candle which usually sits lower than the Star. This formation is bearish in its implications; and the implication is strengthened if the Star is a “Shooting Star,” which looks like its namesake. At the end of an extended declining market, the inverse pattern can also appear; and, perhaps not unexpectedly, its name is the “Morning Star.”

The opposite of the Shooting Star is the “Hammer,” which appears only at the end of an extend downtrend. The Hammer is considered to be one of the more reliable predictors of a possible change of trend to the upside, especially when the next day’s closing price is higher than the closing price of the Hammer.

A “Doji” is a price bar in which the opening price and the closing price are the same. It is considered to be an indicator of a reining-up - of indecision - and of a possible change of trend, when it appears at the end of an extended move in either direction. A Star whose opening price and closing price are the same is called a “Doji Star.” A “Bearish Engulfing” pattern occurs at the top of an uptrend, and is marked by the “real body” (i.e., the cylinder in the price bar) engulfing the real bodies of one or more previous bars. The “Bearish Engulfing” formation is, quite naturally, bearish. Its converse is the Bullish Engulfing pattern, which occurs at the bottom of a downtrend; and, obviously, carries a bullish signal.

In Candlestick parlance, gaps (”windows”) are celebrated as being generators of support and resistance. Often, a comparison of price action before and following a gap clearly reveals the power of a gap to repel prices which venture within it.

The Candles are useful in any time frame, including day trading. Although they are valuable in foretelling reversals, they do not predict the extent of a move. They are perfectly compatible with all “Western” Indicators, and the synergy which often results from the Candles and the Western Indicators used together can be remarkable. Furthermore, the Candles are equally adaptable to use in every financial market, including stocks, indexes, commodities, and Forex.

Technical analysis of Japanese Candlestick price imaging is founded on the hypothesis that price action in the financial markets is not random or mechanical; rather, that it is patterned (if the practitioner is following Elliott Wave theory), and that it is the result of human emotion in action.

There are many practitioners of Candlestick analytics who make their services available to the investing public. Some of them publish investment advisory newsletters (alternatively called “investment newsletters” or “market letters” or permutations thereof); some offer instructional and training seminars, forums, and chat rooms; some publish books; and some of them offer multiple services and products. Their observation of the Candlestick world sometimes leads to a critique of the common wisdom as propounded by the media, and to explicit review of, and commentary on, the state of the markets. Expostulation of the Candlestick analytical technique is not commonly a part of financial news programs, either in the popular printed media or on television; nor are the particulars of Candle theory often the subject of study, research, investigation, or illustration for the benefit of the investing public.

This is unfortunate, because the information which flows from these concepts could often open up new possibilities for investors and be of value to them in their decision making process.

http://www.candlewave.com