Forex school part 11 Know Your History!


Know Your History!

Forex History

Retail Forex Brokers

In the past, only the big speculators and highly capitalized investment funds could trade currencies, but thanks to retail forex brokers and the Internet, this isn't the case anymore.

With hardly any barriers to entry, anybody could just contact a broker, open up an account, deposit some money, and trade forex from the comfort of their own home. Brokers basically come in two forms:

Market makers, as their name suggests, "make" or set their own bid and ask prices themselves and

Electronic Communications Networks (ECN), who use the best bid and ask prices available to them from different institutions on the interbank market.

Market Makers

Let's say you wanted to go to France to eat some snails. In order for you to transact in the country, you need to get your hands on some euros first by going to a bank or the local foreign currency exchange office. For them to take the opposite side of your transaction, you have to agree to exchange your home currency for euros at the price they set.

Like in all business transactions, there is a catch. In this case, it comes in the form of the bid/ask spread.

For instance, if the bank's buying price (bid) for EUR/USD is 1.2000, and their selling price (ask) is 1.2002, then the bid/ask spread is 0.0002. Although seemingly small, when you're talking about millions of these forex transactions every day, it does add up to create a hefty profit for the market makers!

You could say that market makers are the fundamental building blocks of the foreign exchange market. Retail market makers basically provide liquidity by "repackaging" large contract sizes from wholesalers into bite size pieces. Without them, it will be very hard for the average Joe to trade forex.


Electronic Communications Network

Electronic Communication Network is the name given for trading platforms that automatically match customer's buy and sell orders at stated prices. These stated prices are gathered from different market makers, banks, and even other traders who use the ECN. Whenever a certain sell or buy order is made, it is matched up to the best bid/ask price out there.

Due to ability of traders to set their own prices, ECN brokers typically charge a VERY small commission for the trades you take. The combination of tight spreads and small commission usually make transaction costs cheaper on ECN brokers.

Of course, it's not enough to know the big guys in the biz. As Big Pippin once said, "Trading requires timing". Do you know WHEN you should trade?


Previous
Next Post »
Thanks for your comment