Thursday, November 12, 2009

Forex Advertising


EarnForex.com receives only high quality and extremely targeted traffic which comes mainly from search engines, online directories and Forex related forums. Visitors are highly interested in everything about Forex and financial trading. Constantly updated content keeps a large part of our auditory revisit EarnForex.com on a regular basis.

The advertising rates are quite moderate, making your Forex advertisements an effective marketing tool. Buying Forex advertisements (banners or text link) will bring you only high quality targeted visitors.

Following types of Forex advertisements are currently available (all placement options are site-wide unless otherwise stated):
Site except Blog part and Russian language part
 

Banner advertisement rates:
Top banner position, 468x60 (just below the title image) — $1600/month or $450/week. Unavailable.
Bottom banner position, 468x60 (just above the risk disclaimer) — $900/month or $250/week. Available.
Menu banner position, 120x60 (under the site menu) — $450/month or $150/week. Unavailable.

Text link advertisement rates:
Bottom text link position (just above the risk disclaimer) — $175/month or $50/week. Available.
Menu text link position (under the site menu) — $175/month or $50/week. Available.
Featured Forex broker listing — from $400/month. Featured brokers appear at preset positions (in the default view) and are also highlighted for more visitors' attention. Featured brokers appear so in all relevant broker categories. Available.
Featured text link listing on the "Forex Resources" page — $300/year. Featured link is showing in a bold style and appears above all non-featured links. Available.
Blog part
 

Banner advertisement rates:
Top banner position, 468x60 (just below the title) — $700/month or $200/week. Unavailable.
Bottom banner position, 468x60 (just below all posts) — $450/month or $150/week. Unavailable.
Menu banner position, 120x60 (just above MyBlogLog widget) — $250/month or $80/week. Available.

Text link advertisement rates:
Menu text link position (just above MyBlogLog widget) — $150/month or $45/week. Available.
Russian language part
 

Banner advertisement rates:
Top banner position, 468x60 (just below the title image) — $250/month or $75/week. Available.
Bottom banner position, 468x60 position (just above the risk disclaimer) — $175/month or $50/week. Unavailable.
Menu banner position, 120x60 (under the site menu) — $150/month or $45/week. Available.

Text link advertisement rates:
Bottom text link position (just above the risk disclaimer) — $75/month or $25/week. Available.
Menu text link position (under the site menu) — $75/month or $25/week. Available.
Featured text link listing on the "Forex ресурсы" page — $125/year. Featured link is showing in a bold style and appears above all non-featured links. Available.
Additional information

Discount for 12-month orders — 10%.

Other banner positions and their rates can be negotiated.

Available methods of paying for the Forex advertising:
Wire transfer
WebMoney
Moneybookers

If you want to buy Forex advertising on this site, please, contact me.


All advertisement prices can be changed without any notice.

InstaForex Forex Broker


InstaForex is a MetaTrader Forex broker, which offers all the useful features sought by the Forex traders in their broker — convenient way to fund the account and get the earned profit back, excellent connection with the trading servers and the quote quality, helpful support and the abundance of the trading tools to choose from. All these features are well combined in InstaForex. Here's the quick glance at its advantages:
Start trading with the low minimum of $1.
Flexible leverage from 1:1 up to 1:500.
Receive monthly interest on your trading account funds.
3 pips spread on the major USD-based currency pairs.
Uninterrupted order execution.
Account deposits via Moneybookers, WebMoney, e-Bullion, wire transfer, credit cards and PayPal.
Trade on Forex, CFDs and indexes.
MetaTrader 4 trading platform — leading Forex software solution.
Multilingual phone and chat support.
Swap-free accounts available on demand.
Free bonus system on account opening: Deposit: Bonus:
$100 $30
$800 $200
$5,000 $1,000
$50,000 $5,000


To start trading with InstaForex you first need to open an account on their website, then download MetaTrader 4 terminal from their website and deposit the funds to this account via your favorite payment system. That's all! Now you can enjoy Forex trading with InstaForex.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Forex Information For More Educated Trading Decision

The concepts of Globalization have changed the forex trading dramatically over the past several years. New investment strategies and instant electronic trading now ensures high returns for the investors. Therefore it has become quite important for the traders to have authentic forex information. Internet and other electronic sources like CDs, DVDs, etc., are fast replacing the conventional resources like books, magazines, etc.

The advantages of these electronic sources are there 'interactive' modules and ease of navigation, which make them faster and more effective for even beginners to comprehend the information. Dynamic features like search or graphical representation of live data with two or three dimensional charts, graphs, and 'easy to learn' e books are presented quite attractively to help the readers in understanding the subject.

You can have online forex information on:

? Forex definitions and terms including glossary,

? Market background information and the developmental stages of the trading,

? Trading strategy and decision making,

? Different methods of Technical and Fundamental analysis,

? Controlling the risk.

Forex trading has long been recognized as a superior investment opportunity and the market is expanding to the individual small or medium traders than ever before. If you are powered by the knowledge and keep yourself informed, you have huge potential for earning from the market. Internet sites offer you wide ranges of e books which are classified in different groups like: forex books for beginners, books on market in general, on market profile basics, money management, trader's psychology, strategy and even books for advanced traders for supplementing their knowledge.

Forex information in the form of articles is again an exhaustive resource. One single site may present 2000 featured articles from which you can read any depending on your needs. These articles can be on brokerage, technical and fundamental analysis, money management, general tips or strategy building etc.

There are vendors or market professionals who offer forex tips and signals, which you can have by subscribing to their services. You can have information on forex market analysis, charts and technical analysis, trading platforms, facility to open demo account, etc. Different forex forums and groups are again a very useful resource for authentic information. You may find your queries being answered by veteran forex traders and the best thing is, most of the time, these tips are free. These traders very often share useful strategies and tips that proves to be extremely helpful. Other than these electronic resources, you can always authenticate the forex information from books and magazines. Crash courses and short term seminars organized by different universities also prove to be helpful for those who are comfortable with the conventional class room mode of learning. Another advantage of these seminars is you get your doubts cleared by the experts directly. So the buzzword is to get informed and educated before you tread into the trade.

Forex more information about starting out trading currencies online please visit

ECN Forex Brokers

A list of ECN Forex brokers which provide Forex traders with a direct access to other Forex market participants — retail and institutional. This results in some advantages — no anti-scalping, no «stop-loss hunting», very low spreads; and disadvantages — ECN brokers charge commissions for Forex trading.

Sort by: Order | Minimum Account | Traders' Rating | Name

Forex Broker Name Min. Account Size MT4 WebMoney CFD Browser-based
Platform
Registered
with any Regulator
Easy On-line
Account Opening
Rating
FXOpen$1++--++8.6
MasterForex$1+++--+6.0
FastBrokers$500+---++6.7
Interactive Brokers$5,000--++++8.9
MB Trading$400+---+-7.7
Hotspot FX$7,500+---+-6.1
Dukascopy$50,000----+-8.5
Forex Club$10----++6.4
ATC Brokers$3,500+---+-6.9
WH SelfInvest€2,500--+++-8.4
ATG$25,000----+-8.1

LiteForex Forex Broker

LiteForex is one of the leading MetaTrader 4 Forex brokers that accept e-currencies (such as WebMoney) as the payment method. Accounts can be started with the minimum of $1, which combined with flexibility of MetaTrader platform makes LiteForex an ultimate choice for the traders that want to test their automated trading strategies on real account, but without risk of losing too much money. CFD trading is also available, so Forex traders can diversify some of their portfolio into stocks traded on NYSE.

  • Start trading with $1.
  • Commission free trading.
  • Leverage from 1:50 to 1:500.
  • Receive monthly interest on your balance.
  • Competitive fixed bid/ask spreads.
  • Really fast order execution.
  • Account deposits via wire transfer, WebMoney, Liberty Reserve and AlertPay.
  • Many different account types available.
  • 33 currency pairs, 8 currency indexes, 32 CFDs and 2 metals to trade.
  • One of the best trading platforms - MetaTrader 4.
  • Reliable dedicated trading servers.
  • 24 hours a day, 5 days a week trading support.
  • Partnership opportunities for serious clients.

It is easy to start trading with LiteForex - all you have to do is just register at their website, download their MetaTrader 4 client software, deposit money via one of the available methods (takes no more than an hour) and start trading!

Oil Trading Forex Brokers


An assorted list of Forex brokers that provide all traders with the opportunity to trade oil and sometimes other types of commodities. Oil price is strongly connected to the currency rates, that's why the oil market often brings a good chance to the Forex traders to increase their usual profit.

Sort by: Order | Minimum Account | Traders' Rating | Name

Forex Broker Name Min. Account Size MT4 WebMoney CFD Browser-based
Platform
Registered
with any Regulator
Easy On-line
Account Opening
Rating
Forex4you$1+++--+7.6
FXOpen$1++--++8.6
EXNESS$100+++-++7.0
FxCompany$100+++-++6.3
Ava FX$100-++--+6.9
E-Global$20+-+-++8.2
Easy-Forex$200---+++7.7
Plus500$50--+--+8.8
Aurora Global Markets$1,500--+++-4.8
10Pips$100-++--+8.5
Boston Merchant Financial$100+++-++6.2
Saxo Bank$2,000--+-+-5.2
Interactive Brokers$5,000--++++8.9
X-Trade Brokers$2,000+-+-+-5.2
MB Trading$400+---+-7.7
Finotec$200--+-++7.4
ECN broker$200----++2.9
ODL Securities$2,000+-+-++7.6
MF Global$10,000--+-+-3.6
Forex Broker Name Min. Account Size MT4 WebMoney CFD Browser-based
Platform
Registered
with any Regulator
Easy On-line
Account Opening
Rating
IG Markets$200--++++8.3
CMC Markets$2,000--+-+-3.8
Neuimex$400+++-++2.6
MFN$500--+--+3.6
FIBOGroup$300+-+--+3.1
ActivTrades€250+-++++8.3
ABN AMRO marketindex£1--++++7.5
GCI Financial$2,000++++++3.7
FxPro$100+-+-++6.3
DeltaStock$100+-+++-8.0
Forex-Metal$1+++-++3.5
One Financial$250+-+++-6.2
Exto Capital$1,000-+++++4.7
NobleTrading$250---+++8.5
GDI Markets$10,000--+-+-6.5
GOMarkets$1+-+-++8.0
ATC Brokers$3,500+---+-6.9
Windsor Brokers$100+-+-+-7.8
ForexYard$100---+-+3.5
HY Markets$50---+++5.8
Forex Broker Name Min. Account Size MT4 WebMoney CFD Browser-based
Platform
Registered
with any Regulator
Easy On-line
Account Opening
Rating
Prime4x$100+-+--+5.8
Arab Financial Brokers$2,000+---++5.5
WH SelfInvest€2,500--+++-8.4
Sucden£5,000--+-+-5.2
EMPFX$300--+--+3.8
Bulbrokers$50+-+-+-5.1
HMS Markets€10,000--+-+-4.8
BroCo$100+++-+-6.4
FX-PRO$1,000+----+7.8
ATG$25,000----+-8.1
WSD$1,000+-+-+-3.0
Taurus Global Markets$5,000+-+--+3.4
Forex Place$100+-+--+8.2
MoneyRain$100+++-++7.5
Azurite Markets$100--+++-5.0
1pipfix$100+++--+3.8
Basel Financial$50++--++7.5
Global Futures$250+-+-++6.0

MetaTrader 5 New Position System



The new position system of MetaTrader 5 (no-hedge FIFO) is quite different from what the Forex traders used to see in MT4. It spurred many flame wars on various Forex-related forums and made many worthy traders believe that trading with new MT5 adds extra costs to trading (in a form of spread or commission) due to the additional required orders/positions. Some traders also believe that having only one position per currency pair limits their trading strategy opportunities, as they can no longer open short-term counter-trend trades during the long-term trend trades. In reality, this is not true and everything that was possible in MT4 remains possible in MT5 — of course, it will look different, but the result (in form of a profit or a loss) will be the same. According the poll that I’ve posted almost two weeks ago, 53% prefer old MT4 system over the new one, and only 10% prefer new MT5 position system, which is quite sad.

The two presented charts depict the same USD/JPY market situation, processed with the same trading system but on two different platforms — MetaTrader 4 (first picture) and MetaTrader 5 (second picture).

On about August 10 we enter a Short Position by sending a Sell Order @ 97.67 to our MT4 terminal. On about October 9 we realize that it’s a good opportunity to enter a

counter-trend Long Position and get some profit from it, without exiting our long-term Short Position. We send a Buy Order @ 88.59 to MT4 and now we have two open Positions of the same size — one Short and one Long. On about October 27 we realize that the counter-trend is over and it’s time to exit our short-term Long Position. We close it (actually, by sending a Sell Order @ 92.23) and get 364 pips of profit from it; at this moment we also have paid 1 full spread to our broker for opening and closing 1 Position. We continue with our Short Position until November 6 and with the current price at 89.86 we have about 781 pips of floating profit on this position. If we close it now, we get a total of 1,145 pips profit for all two closed positions and we’ll have 2 full spreads paid to our Forex broker. As you can see, we were in the market during 3 months, with about 16 days with two positions on the same currency On about August 10 we enter a Short Position by sending a Sell Order @ 97.67 to our MT5 terminal. On about October 9 we realize that it’s a good opportunity to enter a

counter-trend Long Position and get some profit from it without exiting our long-term Short Position, but, unfortunately (or fortunately), we can’t hedge in MT5. So, we send a Buy Order @ 88.59 to MT5 platform and it simply closes our Short Position, giving us 908 pips of profit and taking 1 full spread from us. Contrary to the popular belief, we don’t have to open another Position at this point to gain from the bullish counter-trend, because we gain just by exiting the Short Position and avoiding the loss on it. Now we have no market Positions. On about October 27 we realize that the counter-trend is over and it’s time to exit our short-term Long Position, but fortunately enough, we didn’t even open it. So, we reopen our long-term Short Position (by sending a Sell Order @ 92.23). We continue with our Short Position until November 6 and, with the current price at 89.86, we have about 237 pips of floating profit on this position. If we close it now, we get a total of 1,145 pips of profit for all two closed positions and we’ll have 2 full spreads paid to our broker. As you can see, we were in the market during 2 months and then during about 14 days, and we were out of the marketIn both cases we earned the same profit — 1,145 pips and paid the same amount of pips in spread (equal to 2 closed positions). We used the same system and orders to operate the market and we’ve got the same results. In fact, there is one thing different in term of profit/loss with MT5 and MT4 — it’s the amount of the rollover interest, since you reduce the number of days, during which the positions are accountable for such interest, you reduce your losses from the overnight swap charged on your trading account. The given example can be scaled out to any amount of the interconnected positions. Even a grid trading strategy can be compressed into

no-hedge FIFO 1-position system of MetaTrader 5. If you are still not convinced, just ask for more examples and I will gladly provide them.

EUR/CHF Double Bottom Horizontal Channel


The weekly chart of EUR/CHF currency pair is showing a rather rare pattern — a horizontal channel formed by the support and resistance levels. The support level is a double bottom with two lines close to one another. The bearish breakout through such support level can be a very strong signal. EUR/CHF is known to be a rather stable pair as both currencies are European but the Swiss franc (CHF) tends to gain during elevated

risk-aversion, while the euro — on higher appetites for risk. You can click on the image below to see the full-size chart:

Displaying Variable Spread on Chart


Enough with the conversion of the old MT4 indicators to MT5. I’ve decided to ad something new today. One of my site’s visitors asked me to make some working MT5 indicator that would display the spread on the chart (which is really useful for variable spreads). I’ve created this indicator both for MetaTrader 4 and 5 platforms. You can use it to be always able to see the real actual spread on the currency pair you are trading. You can modify almost all display parameters and it will work with the additional digit quotes too. Maybe I shouldn’t be making an indicator out of it, and it would work fine as a script, but I believe that in this case the indicator allows more flexibility and probably some future upgrades:

Forex Articles

Read the most popular and helpful Forex articles. All these Forex articles are written by the talented Forex traders, analysts and strategists. You can submit your own Forex article on our Forex article submission page.

All Forex articles are divided into the following categories:

Introduction to Forex

Advantages of the Forex Market — by Heather Redmond

Investing in Forex — by Joe Clinton

Forex The Future Investment — by Mike Pachuta

Explosive Profits: 7 Reasons to Trade Forex — by Sorna Devadas

Why Trade the Forex? — by Susan Walker

Forex Avenue: The Road to Riches — by Scott Bianchi

Forex Trading — by Richard Goldie

Forex Enterprise — A Full Review — by Joey Merrick

Introduction To Forex Trading — by Marquez Comelab

The Benefits of Trading The Forex Market — by Marquez Comelab

Trading Forex To Advance Your Financial Position — by Jay Moncliff

The 6 Advantages Forex Trading Has Over Other Investments — by David Morrison

What Is Forex Trading? — by David Morrison

Forex Trade: Main Drawbacks of a Forex Trader — by Raul Lopez

Learn Currency Trade — Intro to The Forex Market — by Anna Rowe

Forex: Benefits of Trading the Forex Market — by Raul Lopez

Forex Trading — Understanding Commissions, Spreads and Trading Costs — by Rich Cochrane

Interested in Forex Trading? — by Jill Kane

Forex: What Is It And How Does It Work? — by Frederic Madore

Futures Versus Forex (Foreign Exchange Market) — by Jeff Slokum

Online Forex Trading — by Bob Hett

How To Get Started In Forex Trading — by Ron King

Forex Market Offers Opportunity And Information — by Jay Moncliff

Forex Glossary — by Norman Fleming

Introduction To Forex — by Norman Fleming

How To Get Started In Forex Trading — by Hana Lee

Reality of Online Forex Trading — by David Jones

Internet Marketing VS Forex Currency Trading — by Amin Sadak

Forex Made Easy for Everyone — by Brian Kolewe

Forex Trading — Opportunities for Individuals — by Anthony Trister

Your Mother Could Make Money In Forex Trading — by Wayne Watson

The History of Forex Trading — by Divyansh Sharma

A Short Introduction To Forex — by Adrian Pablo

Forex 101: Make Money with Currency Trading — by Rich McIver

Online Forex — by Rafik Patel

Shoes Or Forex? — by Marquez Comelab

Forex 101 — by John Sanderson

Currency Trading Is Not The Monopoly Of The Nerds And The Geeks — by Sara Chambers

What Is Rollover Interest In The Forex Market? — by Martin Maier

Investment Myths And The Forex Markets — by David Mclauchlan

The Forex Market And Its Three Distinctive Elements — by David Mclauchlan

The Prime Time For Daily Forex Trading — by David Mclauchlan

A Forex Quickie — How To Get An Educated Quick Start — by David Mclauchlan

Forex Trading, What Hours Should I Be Ready For Trading? — by Adrian Pablo

The Pros and Cons, of Trading a Forex Trading Demonstration Account — by Bill Boyd

Forex: Starting your own trading — by Andrey Moraru

Forex Practice Accounts — Are Demo Accounts Really a Good Thing? — by Paul Bryan

Methods or Techniques for Trading the Forex Market — by Linda Wainman

Why Forex Trading is an Ideal Home Business — by Garry Williams

How to Make Forex Give the Lifestyle You Want — by Ryan Joseph Ferrer

Trade Forex or Invest in Real Estate? — by Marquez Comelab

Forex Brokerage Articles

Avoiding Forex-Related Frauds and Scams — by Marquez Comelab

Trading Currency Through Online Forex Brokers — by Jay Moncliff

Finding Reliable Forex Signals — by Elisha Gan

How To Choose A Forex Broker — by Mark Freeman

Forex Trading Platform — by Gary Berg

Sending Signals For Trading In Forex — by Gary Berg

Forex Software Packages — by Ryan Larson

Forex Broker Involvement Optional — by Jay Moncliff

Forex Signal Services — by Amber Lowery

Forex Brokers — by Simon Harris

Forex Brokers — Helping to Maximize Your Success — by Anthony Trister

Choosing A Forex Broker — by Geoff Turnbull

Forex Software — Choosing The Best — by Oliver Turner

How To Spot Forex Fraud — by Willie Reynolds

Forex Scams: How To Spot Them A Mile Away — by John Bekian

Choosing Your Forex Broker....Important Facts — by David Mclauchlan

How to Save Yourself from Forex Scam — by Teo Gee

8 Basic Tips on choosing Best Forex Broker — by Mostafa Soleimanzadeh

6 Critical Factors For Successful Forex Trading — by Roxanne Manning

How To Find A Forex Broker That Won`t Rob You Blind — by Jimmy Cox

Choosing the Right Forex Broker — by David Thorpe

Are Forex Brokers The Antichrist or is Broker-Bashing one Gigantic Witch Hunt? — by David Thorpe

The Best Forex Broker: One for Everyone — by Carl Hayes

Forex Technical Analysis Articles

Forex Trading Indicators and the Ever Changing Market Conditions — by Martin Redhead

Pivot Points in Forex: Mapping your Time Frame — by Raul Lopez

What's Fibonacci Forex Trading? — by Adrian Pablo

What's the .382 Fibonacci Ratio in Forex Trading? — by Adrian Pablo

How To Read Forex Charts: 5 Things You Must Know — by Mark Hamburg

Trading Forex With Pivot Points — by E.J. Sieberhagen

Forex and Some Important Facts about Bollinger Bands — by Adrian Pablo

Neural Networks Learn Forex Trading Strategies — by Duncan McQueen

The Elliott Wave Theory For Forex Markets — by David Mclauchlan

Fibonacci And The Forex Market — by David Mclauchlan

Relative Strength Analysis In Forex Trading — by David Mclauchlan

Trading Trend And Ranges In Today's Forex — by David Mclauchlan

Forex Traders Need To Know About Crossing Currency — by David Mclauchlan

Moving Averages Basics And How They Help Forex Traders — by Adrian Pablo

Better Understand Technical Analysis and Some Indicators — by Sorna Devadas

Bollinger Bands — by Cynthia Macy

Gann Angles — A Unique Powerful Tool For Trading Profits — by Sacha Tarkovsky

Fibonacci Numbers — Trade For Huge Profits With This Unique Tool! — by Sacha Tarkovsky

Discover Some Magic to Beat The Forex: The Elliott Wave Theory for Forex Markets — by Joseph Plazo

Forex Information: How To Draw DeMark Trendlines — by Michael A. Jones

Indicator of Forex Market Economy — by Manish

Technical Analysis: How to Read the Price Action — by Carl Hayes

Point and Figure Charts: an Easy Way to Recognize Trends in Forex — by Carl Hayes

Forex Fundamental Analysis Articles

Introduction To Fundamental Analysis: Forex — by John Sanderson

Forex Capital Markets And Foreign Exchange Transactions — by Gary Berg

World Events and Wise Forex Trading — by Adrian Pablo

What About The Oil Market Does It Affect Forex Trading — by David Mclauchlan

Do Interest Rates Drive The Foreign Exchange Markets? — by David Mclauchlan

Forecasting Forex Trading — by David Mclauchlan

Forex Trading Is Driven By Five Top Economic Indicators — by David Mclauchlan

Understanding What Influences Forex Prices — by Sorna Devadas

Energy Prices, Inflation and Forex — by Peter Grant

How Are Interest Rates Set? — by Glenn Reschke

New Housing Index Benefits Forex Market Investors — by Harman Gilly

Forex Market Trading Hours — by Harman Gilly

The Establishment Survey and the Forex Market — by Harman Gilly

The Forex Market and the Employment Cost Index — by Harman Gilly

The ISM Manufacturing Index and the Economy — by Harman Gilly

Durable Goods and the Forex Market — by Harman Gilly

Fundamental Analysis: Study Economics, Trade the Markets — by Carl Hayes

Forex Money Management Articles

The Sneaky Way To Managing Losses In Your Forex Trading — by David Jenyns

Money Management Tips For Trading On The Forex — by David Mclauchlan

Forex — Dealing With Your Losses — by Don Spanish

The Costs Of Trading — by Marquez Comelab

Forex: Exiting positions at a right time — by Andrey Moraru

Protective Puts — by John Jagerson

The Power of Small Consistent Returns — by Marquez Comelab

Money Management in Forex: the Real Deal in Trading — by Carl Hayes

Forex Trading Psychology Articles

Forex: Why Psychiatrists Make Better Traders Than Expert Economists? — by Alexander Brin

Emotions And Forex Trading Don't Mix — by David Mclauchlan

Forex Market Trading And The Mind Games — by David Mclauchlan

Forex: No psychological limitations — by Joshua White

Trading Psychology: Mistakes in a Trading Environment — by Raul Lopez

Forex Trading: The Fear Factor — by Michael J Campbell

Forex trading psychology: Learn to see the line between the trading plan and your emotional impulses — by Bofdan Vasile

Your Forex trading potential can be predicted by looking at your daily emotional behavior — by Bofdan Vasile

The Funny Sort Of Traders In Forex Currency Trading — by Kevin Anderson

Forex : How To Handle A String Of Investment Losses — by Amy Goodmann

Why do the best trading systems fail? — by Christopher Temple

How to Take Control in Forex Trading — by Joe Chalhoub

The Advantages of Trading Alone — by Marquez Comelab

Trading Your Emotions: How to Cope with Psychological Pressures — by Carl Hayes

Forex General Tips Articles

5 Things You Must Do If You Want To Attain Financial Freedom Through Forex Trading — by Eddie Yakubovich

Real Forex Traders Learn to Like Losses — by Scottie Pippin

Forex Trading Guide — How to deal with Forex Trading — by Gagandeep Dhaliwal

Forex Course: A Quick Forex Guide for Traders — by Raul Lopez

Forex Trading Tips — by Fiorenzo Fontana

Day Trading Forex Market Behaviour — by Jay Moncliff

Forex Trading Education: Things You Should Know About Forex Trading — by Raul Lopez

Trading In The Forex Requires Some Caution — by Sara Jenkins

Forex Training: What to Look for in a Forex Training Program — by Raul Lopez

Your Forex Trading Philosophy — by Ron King

Revealed — Million Dollar Forex Investing Mistakes — by David Jenyns

Are These Simple Trading Mistakes Costing You Money In The Forex Market — by David Jenyns

Forex Day Trading: How To Create Massive Wealth From Forex Day Trading — by I-key Benney, CEO

Managing The Forex Accounts For You — by Gary Berg

Getting a Forex Trading Education — by Jay Moncliff

Where to Get Forex Training — by Jay Moncilff

Forex Trading Philosophy — by Dries Cronje

Forex Profits — by Anthony Trister

Option Arbitrage in the Forex Market — by John Nobile

The Properties Of Price Movement — by Marquez Comelab

The Trading Teacher — by Marquez Comelab

Forex Training: Deadly Forex Mistakes That Assure Failure — by Raul Lopez

Learn By Hands On Forex Trading: Demo Accounts Vs Mini Accounts — by Amber Lowery

Day Trading, Forex Or Currencies Back Testing — A Way To Improve Your Trading Score — by David Jenyns

Is There Such A Thing As Hedging In The Forex Market — by David Mclauchlan

Day Trading Tips for Dummies — by Tim Lee

Boost Forex Trading Profits Using These 3 Simple Guidelines — by Roxanne Manning

The 7 Undeniable Rules of Forex Trading — by Sorna Devadas

How The Matrix Will Boost Your Forex Profits? — by Karima Begag

Two Timeless Rules in Forex Investing — by Adrian Pablo

Secrets To Potentially Making Money In The Forex Markets — by Bill Poulos

FOREX Education — Thinking Of Buying FOREX Advice? Read This First — by Sacha Tarkovsky

Too Many Strategies, But Still Frustrated? — by S.A Ghafari

Stop Loss?? I Don't Want To Use It — by S.A Ghafari

133 Trading Tips — by AKFOREX

Making Forex Day Trading Successful — by Harman Gilly

Tips to Make Money Fast in Forex — by Ryan Joseph Ferrer

Forex Strategy Building Articles

Forex Trading Strategies — by Gay Redmile

How To Loose Everything — The Worst Forex Trading Strategy Ever That You Might Be Using — by David Jenyns

Choosing A Forex Strategy — by Giles Windholm

Forex Trading: The Perfect Forex Trading System — by Raul Lopez

A Sneaky Way to Steal Someone Else's Forex Trading System — by David Jenyns

Trying Forex Trading with the Best Strategy and Approach — by Sara Jenkins

Your Guide to Learning a Forex Trading System — by Morgan Hamilton

Do You Have A Back Up Plan? — by Marquez Comelab

Why You Need To Develop Your Own Trading System — by Marquez Comelab

Forex Trading Systems: Mechanical Vs. Discretionary Systems — by Raul Lopez

Profitable Forex Strategies and Techniques — by Nathaniel Tabares

Moving The Forex Market With Trading And Intervention Techniques — by David Mclauchlan

My Forex Trading Strategy — by Timothy Rohrer

An Overview Of Forex Investing Strategies — by Willie Reynolds

Forex Forecasts — You Never Know What You Will Benefit From — by Kevin Anderson

5 EMAs FOREX SYSTEM, Exponential Moving Averages Full Potential — by Adrian Pablo

Automated Trading Systems for Financial Markets and Recommendations for Their Usage — by Nikita Laukhin

100% Hedging Strategies — by Yannis Karamanakis

How I became a successful part time trader — by Joe Chalhoub

Scalping The Forex Market For Profits Every Day — by Dean Saunders

The Opportunities of Trading the Forex Hedged Grid System — by Mary McArthur

Forex Profits by Buying and Selling at the Same Time? — by Mary McArthur

I am Happy with My System, What's Next? — by Marquez Comelab

Build a Forex Trading Account You Can Be Proud of — by Annabel Meade

Forex Glossary

ADX (Average Directional Index) — standard technical indicator that measures the strength of a trend.

Ask (Offer) — price of the offer, the price you buy for.

Aussie — a Forex slang name for the Australian dollar.

Bank Rate — the percentage rate at which central bank of a country lends money to the country's commercial banks.

Bid — price of the demand, the price you sell for.

Broker — the market participating body which serves as the middleman between retail traders and larger commercial institutions.

Cable — a Forex traders slang word GBP/USD currency pair.

Carry Trade — in Forex, holding a position with a positive overnight interest return in hope of gaining profits, without closing the position, just for the central banks interest rates difference.

CCI (Commodity Channel Index) — a cyclical technical indicator that is often used to detect overbought/oversold states of the market.

CFD — a Contract for Difference — special trading instrument that allows financial speculation on stocks, commodities and other instruments without actually buying.

Commission — broker commissions for operation handling.

CPI — consumer price index the statistical measure of inflation based upon changes of prices of a specified set of goods.

EA (Expert Advisor) — an automated script which is used by the trading platform software to manage positions and orders automatically without (or with little) manual control.

ECN Broker — a type of Forex brokerage firm that provide its clients direct access to other Forex market participants. ECN brokers don't discourage scalping, don't trade against the client, don't charge spread (low spread is defined by current market prices) but charge commissions for every order.

ECB (European Central Bank) — the main regulatory body of the European Union financial system.

Fed (Federal Reserve) — the main regulatory body of the United States of America financial system, which division — FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) — regulates, among other things, federal interest rates.

Fibonacci Retracements — the levels with a high probability of trend break or bounce, calculated as the 23.6%, 32.8%, 50% and 61.8% of the trend range.

Flat (Square) — neutral state when all your positions are closed.

Fundamental Analysis — the analysis based only on news, economic indicators and global events.

GDP (Gross Domestic Product) — is a measure of the national income and output for the country's economy; it's one of the most important Forex indicators.

GTC (Good Till Cancelled) — order to buy or sell of a currency with a fixed price or worse. The order is alive (good) until execution or cancellation.

Hedging — maintaining a market position which secures the existing open positions in the opposite direction.

Jobber — a slang word for a trader which is aimed toward fast but small and short-term profit from an intra-day trading. Jobber rarely leaves open positions overnight.

Kiwi — a Forex slang name for the New Zealand currency — New Zealand dollar.

Leading Indicators — a composite index (year 1992 = 100%) of ten most important macroeconomic indicators that predicts future (6-9 months) economic activity.

Limit Order — order for a broker to buy the lot for fixed or lesser price or sell the lot for fixed or better price. Such price is called limit price.

Liquidity — the measure of markets which describes relationship between the trading volume and the price change.

Long — the position which is in a Buy direction. In Forex, the primary currency when bought is long and another is short.

Loss — the loss from closing long position at lower rate than opening or short position with higher rate than opening, or if the profit from a position closing was lower than broker commission on it.

Lot — definite amount of units or amount of money accepted for operations handling (usually it is a multiple of 100).

Margin — money, the investor needs to keep at broker account to execute trades. It supplies the possible losses which may occur in margin trading.

Margin Account — account which is used to hold investor's deposited money for FOREX trading.

Margin Call — demand of a broker to deposit more margin money to the margin account when the amount in it falls below certain minimum.

Market Order — order to buy or sell a lot for a current market price.

Market Price — the current price for which the currency is traded for on the market.

Momentum — the measure of the currency's ability to move in the given direction.

Moving Average (MA) — one of the most basic technical indicators. It shows the average rate calculated over a series of time periods. Exponential Moving Average (EMA), Weighted Moving Average (WMA) etc. are just the ways of weighing the rates and the periods.

Offer (Ask) — price of the offer, the price you buy for.

Open Position (Trade) — position on buying (long) or selling (short) for a currency pair.

Order — order for a broker to buy or sell the currency with a certain rate.

Pivot Point — the primary support/resistance point calculated basing on the previous trend's High, Low and Close prices.

Pip (Point) — the last digit in the rate (e.g. for EUR/USD 1 point = 0.0001).

Profit (Gain) — positive amount of money gained for closing the position.

Principal Value — the initial amount of money of the invested.

Realized Profit/Loss — gain/loss for already closed positions.

Resistance — price level for which the intensive selling can lead to price increasing (up-trend).

RSI (Relative Strength Index) — indicator that measures of the power of direction price movement by comparing the bullish and bearish portions of the trend.

Scalping — a style of trading notable by many positions that are opened for extremely small and short-term profits.

Settled (Closed) Position — closed positions for which all needed transactions has been made.

Slippage — execution of order for a price different than expected (ordered), main reasons for slippage are — "fast" market, low liquidity and low broker's ability to execute orders.

Spread — difference between ask and bid prices for a currency pair.

Standard Lot — 100,000 units of the base currency of the currency pair, which you are buying or selling.

Stop-Limit Order — order to sell or buy a lot for a certain price or worse.

Stop-Loss Order — order to sell or buy a lot when the market reaches certain price. It is used to avoid extra losses when market moves in the opposite direction. Usually is a combination of stop-order and limit-order.

Support — price level for which intensive buying can lead to the price decreasing (down-trend).

Swap — overnight payment for holding your position. Since you are not physically receiving the currency you buy, your broker should pay you the interest rate difference between the two currencies of the pair. It can be negative or positive.

Technical Analysis — the analysis based only on the technical market data (quotes) with the help of various technical indicators.

Trend — direction of market which has been established with influence of different factors.

Unrealized (Floating) Profit/Loss — a profit/loss for your non-closed positions.

Useable Margin — amount of money in the account that can be used for trading.

Used Margin — amount of money in the account already used to hold open positions open.

Volatility — a statistical measure of the number of price changes for a given currency pair in a given period of time.

VPS (Virtual Private Server) — virtual environment hosted on the dedicated server, which can be used to run the programs independent on the user's PC. Forex traders use VPS to host trading platforms and run expert advisors with

Forex FAQ

What is FOREX?
You can read the detailed answer in the separate section of the site — "What is Forex?".

How can I start trading Forex?
You'll need to register a trading account with a Forex broker, such as Marketiva. Then you can begin using their Forex client program to buy and sell currencies. This will take less than 5 minutes of your time!

Who owns Forex and where is it located?
It's not owned by anyone in particular. Forex is an Interbank market, meaning that it's transactions are conducted only between two participants - seller and the buyer. So as long as existing banking system will exist, Forex will be here. It's not connected to any specific country or government organization.

What the working hours of Forex market?
Forex market is open from 22:00 GMT Sunday (opening of Australia trading session) till 22:00 GMT Friday (closing of USA trading session).

What is margin?
Margin is money you need to have in your broker account to secure your open position. Different brokers require different amount of margin money to keep your positions open.

What are the "long" and "short" positions?
Long position is a "buy" position, meaning that this position will be in profit if price goes up.
Short position is a "sell" position, meaning that this position will be in profit if price goes down.

What is the best Forex trading strategy?
There is none. You should constantly develop your own strategies for every possible market situation, if you want to be in profit. Specific strategies can only be good for a certain period of time and for certain currency pairs.

How much money I need to start trading Forex?
With Marketiva you can start trading Forex with as little as $1. Usually, the minimum amount varies from $100 to $10,000 ($100,000 and more for Interbank trading).

I can't (or don't want to) install any Forex trading software on my computer. Can I still trade Forex?
If you don't want (or it is not possible) to install new software to start trading Forex then a good option for you would be using web based trading platform. You can browse our Forex brokers list to find those which support such platform. Here are those brokers which have web based trading options: Easy Forex, ForexYard, Oanda, Saxo Bank, ACM, Interactive Brokers.

I've downloaded the expert advisor for MetaTrader platform but I don't know how to install it. What should I do?
You can read the MetaTrader Expert Advisors User's Tutorial to find out how to intstall those expert advisors.

I've downloaded a custom indicator for MetaTrader platform but I don't know how to install it. What should I do?
You can read the MetaTrader Indicators User's Tutorial to find out how to intstall those indicators.

Your question was not answered here?

Forex for Dummies

Forex Basics

If you've already read the "What is Forex?" section then you should know what Forex market is and what it is all about. If not, please, do it. There are five essential aspects of foreign currency market a beginner trader (and an old one as well) should be aware of:

Understanding and mastering these sides of trading are crucial to organize your Forex trading experience.

Forex Fundamental Analysis

Fundamental analysis is the process of market analysis which is done regarding only "real" events and macroeconomic data which is related to the traded currencies. Fundamental analysis is used not only in Forex but can be a part of any financial planning or forecasting. Concepts that are part of Forex fundamental analysis: overnight interest rates, central banks meetings and decisions, any macroeconomic news, global industrial, economical, political and weather news. Fundamental analysis is the most natural way of making Forex market forecasts. In theory, it alone should work perfectly, but in practice it is often used in pair with technical analysis. Recommended e-books on Forex fundamental analysis:

Forex Technical Analysis

Technical analysis is the process of market analysis that relies only on market data numbers - quotes, charts, simple and complex indicators, volume of supply and demand, past market data, etc. The main idea behind Forex technical analysis is the postulate of functional dependence of the future market technical data on the past market technical data. As well as with fundamental analysis, technical analysis is believed to be self-sufficient and you can use only it to successfully trade Forex. In practice, both analysis methods are used. Recommended e-books on Forex fundamental analysis are:

Money Management in Forex

Even if you master every possible method of market analysis and will make very accurate predictions for future Forex market behavior, you won't make any money without a proper money management strategy. Money management in Forex (as well as in other financial markets) is a complex set of rules which you develop to fit your own trading style and amount of money you have for trading. Money management play very important role in getting profits out of Forex; do not underestimate it. To get more information on money management you can read these books:

Forex Trading Psychology

While learning a lot about market analysis and money management is an obvious and necessary step to be a successful Forex traders, you also need to master your emotions to keep your trading performance under strict control of mind and intuition. Controlling your emotions in Forex trading is often a balancing between greed and cautiousness. Almost any known psychology practices and techniques can work for Forex traders to help them keep to their trading strategies rather to their spontaneous emotions. Problems you'll have to deal while being a professional Forex trader:

  • Your greed
  • Overtrading
  • Lack of discipline
  • Lack of confidence
  • Blind following others' forecasts

These are very professional books on psychology written specially for financial traders:

Forex Brokerage

Every Forex trader like any other professional needs tools to trade. One of these tools, which is vital to be in market, is a Forex broker and specifically for Internet - on-line Forex broker - a company which will provide real-time market information to trader and bring his orders to Forex market. While choosing a right Forex broker things to look for are the following:

  • Being a professional company you can trust
  • Provide you with real-time quotes
  • Execute your orders fast and accurately
  • Don't take a lot of commissions
  • Support the withdraw/deposit methods that you can use

For beginning Forex traders I recommend these four brokerage companies that are probably the best Forex brokers to start with:

  • FXOpen — one of the most popular and progressive brokers with MetaTrader platform and comfortable trading conditions for all kind of traders.
  • InstaForex — a reputable MetaTrader 4 brokers, allows Islamic Forex trading accounts, while you can deposit and withdraw money via WebMoney.
  • FXcast — good because you can start trading Forex with as little as 10$, use MetaTrader 4 platform and the dozoen of various deposit and withdraw methods, including WebMoney, e-Bullion and wire transfer.
  • LiteForex — broker that supports MetaTrader 4 Forex trading platform and doesn't require a lot of money to start with.

What is Forex?

FOREX - the foreign exchange market or currency market or Forex is the market where one currency is traded for another. It is one of the largest markets in the world.

Some of the participants in this market are simply seeking to exchange a foreign currency for their own, like multinational corporations which must pay wages and other expenses in different nations than they sell products in. However, a large part of the market is made up of currency traders, who speculate on movements in exchange rates, much like others would speculate on movements of stock prices. Currency traders try to take advantage of even small fluctuations in exchange rates.

In the foreign exchange market there is little or no 'inside information'. Exchange rate fluctuations are usually caused by actual monetary flows as well as anticipations on global macroeconomic conditions. Significant news is released publicly so, at least in theory, everyone in the world receives the same news at the same time.

Currencies are traded against one another. Each pair of currencies thus constitutes an individual product and is traditionally noted XXX/YYY, where YYY is the ISO 4217 international three-letter code of the currency into which the price of one unit of XXX currency is expressed. For instance, EUR/USD is the price of the euro expressed in US dollars, as in 1 euro = 1.2045 dollar.

Unlike stocks and futures exchange, foreign exchange is indeed an interbank, over-the-counter (OTC) market which means there is no single universal exchange for specific currency pair. The foreign exchange market operates 24 hours per day throughout the week between individuals with forex brokers, brokers with banks, and banks with banks. If the European session is ended the Asian session or US session will start, so all world currencies can be continually in trade. Traders can react to news when it breaks, rather than waiting for the market to open, as is the case with most other markets.

Average daily international foreign exchange trading volume was $1.9 trillion in April 2004 according to the BIS study.

Like any market there is a bid/offer spread (difference between buying price and selling price). On major currency crosses, the difference between the price at which a market maker will sell ("ask", or "offer") to a wholesale customer and the price at which the same market-maker will buy ("bid") from the same wholesale customer is minimal, usually only 1 or 2 pips. In the EUR/USD price of 1.4238 a pip would be the '8' at the end. So the bid/ask quote of EUR/USD might be 1.4238/1.4239.

This, of course, does not apply to retail customers. Most individual currency speculators will trade using a broker which will typically have a spread marked up to say 3-20 pips (so in our example 1.4237/1.4239 or 1.423/1.425). The broker will give their clients often huge amounts of margin, thereby facilitating clients spending more money on the bid/ask spread. The brokers are not regulated by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (since they do not sell securities), so they are not bound by the same margin limits as stock brokerages. They do not typically charge margin interest, however since currency trades must be settled in 2 days, they will "resettle" open positions (again collecting the bid/ask spread).

Individual currency speculators can work during the day and trade in the evenings, taking advantage of the market's 24 hours long trading day.