Forex.Today: Live Forex Training for Beginner Traders! – Monday 24 FEB 2020

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I’ve been trading forex live since 2004. Watch me go through the technicals and fundamentals of currency trading live. Do you have a question? JUST ASK! Download my chart templates below…

RESOURCES FOR FOREX TRADERS:

Open a forex trading account here: http://www.TradersWay.com

Download my chart templates and indicators here: http://www.MetaTraders.com

Access forex video training courses here: http://www.fxbootcamp.com

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Live forex Webinar hosted by Forex.Today.
Forex Trading Beginners and newbies welcomed!

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These forex trading videos will cover basic educational and training topics for new / beginning fx traders. However, they will also cover advanced trading strategies for those who’ve traded currencies for years.

Technical Analysis and Fundamental Trading Strategies Covered.

Questions and Participation Welcomed!

RISK WARNING
Trading foreign exchange on margin carries a high level of risk, and may not be suitable for all investors. The possibility exists that you could sustain a loss of some or all of your initial investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. Seek education and gain experience before risking real money, but please always remember, your past performance does not guarantee future results.

What Is Forex?
The foreign exchange market (or “forex” for short) is the biggest financial market in the world, with over $4 trillion worth of transactions occurring every day. Simply, forex is the market in which currencies, or money, are traded in the interbanking system.

Forex Tutorial: What is Forex Trading?
By Investopedia Staff

What Is Forex?
The foreign exchange market is the “place” where currencies are traded. Currencies are important to most people around the world, whether they realize it or not, because currencies need to be exchanged in order to conduct foreign trade and business. If you are living in the U.S. and want to buy cheese from France, either you or the company that you buy the cheese from has to pay the French for the cheese in euros (EUR). This means that the U.S. importer would have to exchange the equivalent value of U.S. dollars (USD) into euros. The same goes for traveling. A French tourist in Egypt can’t pay in euros to see the pyramids because it’s not the locally accepted currency. As such, the tourist has to exchange the euros for the local currency, in this case the Egyptian pound, at the current exchange rate.

What is the spot market?
More specifically, the spot market is where currencies are bought and sold according to the current price. That price, determined by supply and demand, is a reflection of many things, including current interest rates, economic performance, sentiment towards ongoing political situations (both locally and internationally), as well as the perception of the future performance of one currency against another. When a deal is finalized, this is known as a “spot deal”. It is a bilateral transaction by which one party delivers an agreed-upon currency amount to the counter party and receives a specified amount of another currency at the agreed-upon exchange rate value. After a position is closed, the settlement is in cash. Although the spot market is commonly known as one that deals with transactions in the present (rather than the future), these trades actually take two days for settlement.

Note that you’ll see the terms: FX, forex, foreign-exchange market and currency market. These terms are synonymous and all refer to the forex market.