Forex Market Structure
For the sake of comparison, let us first examine a market that most folks are probably very familiar with: the stock market.
This is how the structure of the stock market looks like:
By its very nature, the stock market tends to be very monopolistic.
There is only one entity, one specialist that controls prices.
All trades must go through this specialist. Because of this,
prices can easily be altered to benefit the specialist and not traders.
How does this happen?
In the stock market, the specialist is forced to fulfill the order of
its clients. Now, let’s say the number of sellers suddenly exceed the
number of buyers.
The specialist, which is forced to fulfill the order of its clients,
the sellers in this case, is left with a bunch of stock that he cannot
sell-off to the buyer side.
In order to prevent this from happening, the specialist will simply widen the spread or increase the transaction cost to prevent sellers from entering the market.
In other words, the specialists can manipulate the quotes it is offering to accommodate its needs.
Trading Spot FX is Decentralized
Unlike in trading stocks or futures, you don’t need to go through a
centralized exchange like the New York Stock Exchange with just one
price.
In the forex market, there is no single price that for a given
currency at any time, which means quotes from different currency dealers
vary.
“So many choices! Awesome!”
This might be overwhelming at first, but this is what makes the forex market so freakin’ awesome!
The market is so huge and the competition between dealers is so fierce
that you get the best deal almost every single time. And tell me, who
does not want that?
Also, one cool thing about forex trading is that you can do it
anywhere. It’s just like trading baseball cards. You want that mint
condition Mickey Mantle rookie card, so it is up to you to find the best
deal out there.
Your colleague might give up his Mickey Mantle card for just a Babe
Ruth card, but your best friend will only part with his Mickey Mantle
rookie card for your soul.
The FX Ladder
Even though the forex market is decentralized, it isn’t pure and utter chaos!
The participants in the FX market can be organized into a ladder. To
better understand what we mean, here is a neat illustration:
At the very top of the forex market ladder is the interbank market.
Composed of the largest banks in the world and some smaller banks, the
participants of this market trade directly with each other or
electronically through the Electronic Brokering Services (EBS) or the Reuters Dealing.
The competition between the two companies – the EBS and the Reuters Dealing – is similar to Coke and Pepsi.
They are in constant battle for clients and continually try to one-up
each other for market share. While both companies offer most currency
pairs, some currency pairs are more liquid on one than the other.
For the EBS plaform, EUR/USD, USD/JPY, EUR/JPY, EUR/CHF, and USD/CHF are
more liquid. Meanwhile, for the Reuters platform, GBP/USD, EUR/GBP,
USD/CAD, AUD/USD, and NZD/USD are more liquid.
All the banks that are part of the interbank market can see the rates
that each other is offering, but this doesn’t necessarily mean that
anyone can make deals at those prices.
Like in real life, the rates will be largely dependent on the established CREDIT
relationship between the trading parties. Just to name a few, there’s
the “B.F.F. rate,” the “customer rate,” and the
“ex-wife-you-took-everything rate.”
It’s like asking for a loan at your local bank. The better your
credit standing and reputation with them, the better the interest rates
and the larger loan you can avail.
Next on the ladder are the hedge funds,
corporations, retail market makers, and retail ECNs. Since these
institutions do not have tight credit relationships with the
participants of the interbank market, they have to do their transactions
via commercial banks. This means that their rates are slightly higher
and more expensive than those who are part of the interbank market.
At the very bottom of the ladder are the retail traders.
It used to be very hard for us little people to engage in the forex
market but, thanks to the advent of the internet, electronic trading,
and retail brokers, the difficult barriers to entry in forex trading
have all been taken down. This gave us the chance to play with those
high up the ladder and poke them with a very long and cheap stick.
Now that you know the forex market structure, let’s get to know them forex market playaz!
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