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About
Forex Liberty Reserve
What is the Forex?
The Forex Liberty Reserve
refers to the Foreign Currency Exchange Market
in which more than 4,600 International Banks and
thousands of small and large speculators
participate. Every day this worldwide market
exchanges more than $3.5 trillion in dozens of
different currencies. With the current growth
rate, the market is projected to grow to more
than $6.5 trillion per day by the year 2005.
This exciting and rapidly growing financial
market provides the entrepreneur an opportunity
to generate profits in the largest market in the
world.
About Forex
The Forex
market is a cash inter-bank or inter-dealer
market established in 1971 when floating
exchange rates began tomaterialize. Today, the
exchange of currency has expanded from trading
floors to home computers. The simplest
definition of foreign exchange is the changing
of one currency to another, and, unlike the
stock market, one may earn profits whether
buying or selling within the currency exchange.
In comparison to the daily trading volume
averages of $300 billion in the U.S. Treasury
Bond market and the lessthan $10 billion
exchanged in the U.S. stock markets, the Forex
market is huge. Currently there is often an
average of 3.5 trillion levels exchanged daily.
The most
important foreign exchange activity is the spot
business between the dollar and the four major
currencies (Euro, British Pound, Swiss Franc and
Japanese Yen). Activity within the market is
created by six main groups: central banks,
commercial banks, other financial institutions,
corporate customers, brokers and independent
currency traders who have established home-based
businesses.
Forex is not a
"market" in the traditional sense. There is no
centralized location for trading activity as
there is in currency futures. Trading occurs
over the telephone and through computer
terminals at thousands of established locations,
as well as within home-based trading businesses
worldwide.
Cash Forex versus Currency
Futures
As a potential new trader, it is
important for you to understand the differences
between cash Forex and currency futures. In
currency futures, the contract size is
predetermined. Futures traders exercise leverage
by utilizing a performance bond or margin to
control a futures contract. “Margin” is money
deposited by both the buyer and the seller to
assure the integrity of the contract.
With liquidity
in mind, the futures market may seem limiting
because the data flow comes to a stop at the end
of the business day (just as it does with the
stock market), thus disrupting your perception
of the market. For some traders this could lead
to a certain level of anxiety. For example, if
important data comes in from England or Japan
while the U.S. futures market is closed, the
next day’s opening could be a wild ride.
In contrast to
the futures market, the spot Forex market is a
24-hour, continuous currency exchange that never
closes. There are dealers in every major time
zone, in every major dealing center (i.e.,
London, New York, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Sydney,
etc.) willing to quote two-way markets. The size
of this market, a $1.5 to $3.5 trillion dollar
per day market gives you near perfect liquidity.
Because of the advantages of sheer volume and
daily volatility, the excitement of this market
is unparalleled.
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