What Is Currency
Trading?
Currency trading is taking advantage of
shifting foreign exchange rates. The exchange rate between two
currency types specifies what one currency is worth in relation to
another currency. It has been estimated that approximately $2
trillion USD of currency exchanges hands each and every day. The
foreign exchange market is one of the hugest markets in the entire
world.
A market based exchange rate will vary
according to the values of either currency being compared. A
currency will generally become more valuable when the demand for
that currency is greater than the available supply. The same
currency will become less valuable whenever the demand for it
becomes less than the available supply.
So if Japans people are investing their
net worth into things other than Japanese yen, and at the same time
more Americans are investing in American dollars than have in a long
time, chances are the American dollar will be highr than the
Japanese yen.
Lets say that the United States exchange
rate with Japanese yen is 1 : 100 then one American dollar is worth
one hundred Japanese yen.
The foreign exchange markets are
typically very liquid because worldwide, the most powerful
international banks provide a market around the clock. Global
foreign exchange market daily averages of the Bank for International
Settlements in 1998 were $660 billion and now have increased to $2.3
trillion (2006).
Just like stocks go up and down as their
estimated values change, so too do the values of various world
currencies go up and down from time to time. And just like stocks
and bonds can be traded, so too can foreign currency. Foreign
exchange traders make trillions of dollars every day, as there are
always shifting economies and so shifting foreign exchange
rates.
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