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• 24-hour trading, 5 days a week with nonstop access to global Forex dealers.
• An enormous liquid market making it easy to exchange most currencies.
• Volatile markets offering profit opportunities.
• Standard instruments for controlling risk exposure.
• The ability to profit in rising or falling markets.
• Leveraged trading with low margin requirements.
• Many options for zero dealing commission.

• The international real interest rate differential
• Relative prices in the traded and non-traded goods sectors
• The real oil price
• The relative fiscal position

Basic Forex Forecast Methods: Technical Analysis
and Fundamental Analysis


This article provides an insight of the two major methods of analysis used to forecast the behavior of the forex market.
Technical Analysis and Fundamental Analysis differ greatly, but both can be useful forecast tools for the forex trader.
They have the same goal - predict a price or move.

Learn about the basic strategies for Controlling
risks while trading FOREX


The Forex market speed, volatility, and enormous size are unlike anything else in the financial world.

Beware: the Forex market is uncontrollable - no single event, individual, or factor impacts on it. Enjoy trading in the perfect market! Just like any other speculative business, increased risk entails chances for a higher profit/loss.

An Overview Into the Historical Evolution of the Foreign Exchange Market From the days of the gold exchange, through the the Bretton Woods Agreement until present day, this article will follow the historical roots of the international currecny trade to its current setting today.
The Gold Exchange Period and the Bretton Woods Agreement
The Bretton Woods Agreement, established in 1944, fixed national currencies against the dollar, and set the dollar at a rate of $35 per ounce of gold. In 1967, a Chicago bank refused a college professor by the name of Milton Friedman a loan in pound sterling because he had intended to use the funds to short the British currency. The bank's refusal to grant the loan was due to the Bretton Woods.
 
 
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Disclaimer: This website is for informational purposes only and is not intended to provide
specific commercial, financial, investment, accounting, tax, or legal advice.
ForexHomePage.com would like to inform the user of the potential financial risks of engaging in foreign exchange trading.
The transaction of such financial instruments can contain a substantial degree of risk and therefore should only be undertaken with risk capital.