© 1st Forex Trading Academy 2004
17
Introduction
Profit potential in both rising and falling markets
In every open FX position, an investor is long in one currency and short the other. A short posi-
tion is one in which the trader sells a currency in anticipation that it will depreciate. This means
that potential exists in a rising as well as a falling FX market. The ability
to sell currencies wi-
thout any limitations is one distinct advantage over equity trading. It is much more difficult to
establish a short position in the US equity markets, where the Uptick rule prevents investors from
shorting stock unless the immediately preceding trade was equal to or lower than the price of the
short sale.
Currency pairs
The currencies are always traded in pairs. For example, EUR/USD,
which means Euro over US
dollars, would be a typical pair. In this case, the Euro, being the first currency can be called the
base currency
. The second currency,
by default USD, is called the
counter or quote currency
.
As mentioned, the first currency is the base, therefore in a pair you can refer the amount of that
currency as being the amount required to purchase one unit of the second currency.
So, if you
want to buy the currency pair, you have to buy the EURO and sell the USD simulta-
neously. On the other hand, if you are looking forward to sell the currency pair, you have to sell
the EURO and buy the USD.
The most important thing to understand in a currency pair, or more
precisely in a Forex tran-
saction, is that you will be selling or buying the same currency.
Major currencies
US Dollar
– The United States dollar is the world’s main currency – a universal measure to
evaluate any other currency traded on Forex. All currencies are generally quoted in US dollar
terms. Under conditions of international economic and political unrest,
the US dollar is the main
safe-haven currency, which was proven particularly well during the Southeast Asian crisis of
1997-1998.
As it was indicated, the US dollar became the leading currency toward the end of the Second
World War along the Bretton Woods Accord, as the other currencies
were virtually pegged
against it. The introduction of the Euro in 1999 reduced the dollar’s importance only marginally.
The other major currencies traded against the US dollar are the Euro, Japanese Yen, British
Pound and the Swiss Franc.