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Personal Investment > Forex
Forex
Foreign exchange, also known as FOREX, is traded round-the-clock
by financial institutions, commercial users and individual investors
around the world. The top foreign exchange trading centres are London,
New York, Tokyo, Singapore and Hong Kong.
How does FOREX work?
In spot foreign exchange trading, you can buy or sell
a currency priced in terms of another currency in the interbank
spot foreign exchange market through Phillip Futures.
For example, when you buy US$/¥, you are actually buying US$
priced in terms of Yen. Therefore, when you buy US$/¥ at a rate
of 115, it means that you are buying US$1 priced at ¥115. If
your market view is correct and you sell it at ¥116, you would
make a profit of ¥1. When buying a FOREX contract, the contract
or position can be closed-out or liquidated later by an opposite
offsetting sell transaction.
In actual trading, however, investors buy or sell
in minimum multiples of US$100,000 for most currencies, except British
Pound, Australian Dollar and New Zealand Dollar which would be 100,000
in BP, A$ and NZ$ respectively. As a trading example, if an investor
who develops a view that on the basis of economic fundamentals and/or
technical analysis that the US dollar is going to appreciate against
the Yen, he can decide to buy US$100,000 at the prevailing price
of ¥115 and then sell if the price rises to ¥120.
The result, if his view was correct, would be a profit
of ¥500,000 (120 - 115 = 5 x US$100,000).
Margin Trading in FOREX
To buy or sell US$100,000, however, you do not need to deposit the
full amount but only a margin of usually 2-5% of the amount traded.
However, investors should be prepared with more than just the minimum
margin deposit to weather price fluctuation.
For investors who use foreign exchange contracts for trading, there
is also no need to do physical delivery of the currencies. Instead,
the foreign currency contract or position would be automatically
rolled-over or carried forward indefinitely until the investor decides
to liquidate the position.
SWAP Points
In addition to foreign exchange rate which determines the profit
and loss of a trade, another factor to note is that there are also
interest rates applicable when buying or selling foreign exchange.
The buyer or holder of the currency which bears a comparatively
higher interest rate will receive interest rate differential between
the two currencies daily while the holder of the opposite currency
which bears a lower interest rate will be debited the daily interest
rate differential.
This interest differential is referred to or calculated as swap
points which would be used to discount or add a premium to the buying
or selling prices to reflect the daily interest earned or paid.
For example, the buyer of US$ at a price ¥135 would have his
price discounted to reflect the interest differential earned (when
US$ interest rate is higher then Yen interest rate).
So when his US$ position is rolled forward at the "spot"
delivery date which is two days later, the buying price of ¥135
would be adjusted to, say, ¥134.99 if the interest swap points
was 1 point.
To find out more information on Forex, please visit
our Futures
site.
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