The Dollar is King in the Forex Market
You’ve probably
noticed how often we keep mentioning the U.S. dollar (USD). If the USD
is one half of
every
major
currency pair, and the majors
comprise 75% of all trades, then it’s a must to pay attention to the U.S. dollar. The USD
is king!
In fact, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the U.S. dollar comprises roughly
62% of the
world’s official foreign exchange reserves! Because almost every
investor, business, and central bank own it, they pay attention to the U.S. dollar.
There are also other
significant reasons why
the U.S. dollar plays
a central role in the forex market:
The United States economy is
the
LARGEST economy
in
the world.
The U.S. dollar is the reserve currency of the world.
The United States has the largest and most liquid financial
markets in the world.
The United States
has
a super stable political
system.
The United States
is the world’s
sole
military superpower.
The U.S. dollar is the medium of exchange for many cross-border
transactions. For example, oil is
priced in U.S. dollars.
So
if Mexico wants to buy oil from Saudi Arabia, it
can
only be bought with U.S.
dollar. If Mexico doesn’t have any dollars, it has to sell its pesos first and buy U.S. dollars.
Speculation in the Forex Market
One important thing to note about the forex market is
that while commercial and financial transactions are
part of trading volume, most currency trading is based on speculation.
In other
words, most trading volume comes from
traders that buy and sell based on intraday price
movements.
The trading volume brought about by
speculators is estimated to be more than 90%!
The scale of the forex
market means that liquidity– the amount of buying and selling volume happening at
any given time
– is extremely high.
This makes it very easy for anyone to buy
and sell currencies.
From the perspective of an investor, liquidity is
very important because it determines
how easily
price can
change over
a given time period. A liquid market environment like forex enables huge trading volumes
to happen with very little effect on price, or
price action.
While the forex market is relatively
very liquid, the market depth could change depending on the currency
pair
and time of day.
In our forex trading sessions part of the school, we’ll
tell
you how the time of your trades
can affect the pair you’re trading.
In the meantime, here are a few tricks
on
how you can trade currencies in gazillion ways. We even narrowed it down to four!
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