FOREX Currency Pairs
We have already learnt that the FOREX market is the largest in the world and that your broker or institution that you are
trading with is
collecting quotes from a centralized feed or individual quotes comprising of interbank rates. So how are these
quotes made up?.
Well,
as we previously mentioned currencies are traded in pairs and are each assigned a symbol. For the Japanese Yen it
is JPY, for the
Pounds Sterling it is GBP, for Euro it is EUR and for the Swiss Frank it is CHF. So, EUR/USD would be Euro-Dollar
pair. GBP/USD would
be pounds Sterling-Dollar pair and USD/CHF would be Dollar-Swiss Franc pair and so on.
You will always see the USD
quoted first with
few exceptions such as Pounds Sterling, EuroDollar, Australia Dollar and New Zealand Dollar. The first currency
quoted is called the
base currency. Have a look below for some example.
| Currency Symbol |
Currency Pair |
| EUR/USD |
Euro / US Dollar |
| GBP/USD |
Pounds Sterling / US Dollar |
| USD/JPY |
US Dollar / Japanese Yen |
| USD/CHF |
US Dollar / Swiss Franc |
| USD/CAD |
US Dollar / Canadian Dollar |
| AUD/USD |
Australian Dollar / US Dollar |
| NZD/USD |
New Zealand Dollar / US Dollar |
When you see FOREX quotes you will actually see two numbers. The first number is called the bid and the second number
is called the offer (sometimes called the ASK). If we use the EUR/USD as an example you might see 0.9950/0.9955
- the first number
0.9950 is the
bid price and is the price traders are prepared to buy Euros against the USD Dollar. The second number 0.9955 is
the offer price and
is the price traders are prepared to sell the Euro against the US Dollar.
These quotes are sometimes abbreviated to
the last two
digits of the currency such as 50/55. Each broker has its own convention and some will quote the full number and
others will show
only the last two. You will also notice that there is a difference between the bid and the offer price and that is
called the spread. For
the four major currencies the spread is normally 5 give or take a pip (will explain pips later).
To carry on from the symbol conventions and using our previous EUR quote of 0.9950 bid, that means that 1 Euro =
0.9950 US
Dollars. In another example if we used the USD/CAD 1.4500 that would mean that 1 US Dollar = 1.4500 Canadian
Dollars.
See also [ Pips ]
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