Dec 25
Currency Trading Tips How To Choose The Best Pair For Forex Currency Trade Posted By : Daniel Pips
Currency Trading Tips How To Choose The Best Pair For Forex Currency Trade Posted By : Daniel Pips
Do you have an idea on which currency pairs are the best to trade in forex? Is it the major currency pairs, the cross pairs or the exotic pairs? Well there isn’t really a right and wrong answer; it depends on how you define ‘best’. If a currency pair has tight spreads, it may be considered the best trading currency pair for you, but may not apply for others. Here’s the on various factors on choosing a forex pair.
Forex Signals Services: Path to Profits or Trail to Tears? Posted By : Clint Jhonson
Retail forex trading is the most risky form of investing, yet every day hundreds, even thousands of people turn to forex as a way to make a quick buck. They seek out trading signals providers, there are hundreds out there with slick websites and claims of hundreds or thousands of pips per month, for a monthly subscription.
Forex Options Trading - What is Forex? (Part 1 of 2) Posted By : Timothy Stevens
Forex or foreign Exchange or FX involves the buying and selling of one currency against another currency. They are always traded in pairs e.g. EUR/USD, USD/JPY. So when you are buying Euro dollars (EUR) you are also selling the US dollars (USD) in exchange for the Euro dollars.
Forex Options Trading - How to Use an Alternative Trading Method Posted By : Timothy Stevens
When it comes to the Foreign Exchange market, a lot of people are asking how to be able to profit out of it.
The Dos and Don’ts of Shorting the Market Posted By : Leroy Rushing
The Dos and Don’ts of shorting is actually very straight forward, yet many traders heed this advice only to lose money. Shorting any tradable good is a dangerous position by nature; short sellers can lose more than their investment while potentially profiting only as much as 100 per cent. Both day traders and swing traders alike have much to gain from short-term short positions, which allow them to capitalize on the dropping value of a security. Often, it is a failing company or a bursting bubble which can yield large returns on the downside as it did on the upside.
