Article

What is Forex Trading and How Does It Work

Forex trading, also known as foreign exchange (FX) trading, is the global 24-hour marketplace for exchanging one currency against another, with an average daily turnover of approximately 9.6 trillion US dollars. Traders engage in buying and selling currency pairs such as EUR/USD and USD/JPY to speculate on fluctuations in exchange rates or to hedge currency exposure, utilizing essential concepts like pips, spreads, leverage, and margin.

Key Takeaways

  • Forex (FX) is a 24-hour, five-day over-the-counter market where currencies are traded in pairs (e.g., EUR/USD), with a daily turnover exceeding 9.6 trillion US dollars.

  • Each quote represents the price of one unit of the base currency in terms of the quote currency; the bid-ask spread constitutes a primary trading cost.

  • Price fluctuations are measured in pips (0.0001 for most pairs, 0.01 for JPY pairs), and the lot size determines pip value and overall profit or loss.

  • Traders can take long or short positions, and leverage allows control of larger positions but also amplifies losses, making position sizing and stop-loss orders essential.

What is Forex Trading?

Forex trading, also known as foreign exchange or FX trading, involves simultaneously buying one currency and selling another, aiming to profit from fluctuations in exchange rates. All forex transactions occur in pairs, such as EUR/USD. 

The forex market operates 24 hours a day, five days a week, with forex market hours  spanning  major financial centers including London, New York, and Tokyo, and  a daily trading volume exceeding $9.6 trillion. 

How Does Forex Trading Work?

Forex trading functions similarly to any financial transaction involving the exchange of one asset for another, typically executed via online platforms such as MetaTrader 4 (MT4).

In this context, forex traders  simultaneously buy one currency and sell another. The market price of a currency pair indicates how much of the quote currency is required to purchase one unit of the base currency.

For example, if the GBP/USD  pair is quoted at 1.2500, it means 1 British pound  is equivalent to 1.25 US dollars.

Each currency is identified by a three-letter ISO code, facilitating efficient trade execution. Below are some common currency codes:

  • USD – US Dollar
  • EUR – Euro
  • GBP – British Pound
  • JPY – Japanese Yen
  • AUD – Australian Dollar

These codes enable traders to quickly identify and execute trades on currency pairs efficiently.
 Infographic of major global currencies and ISO codes including USD, EUR, GBP, and JPY used in forex trading and the forex market.

Figure 1: Illustrates various unique currency codes

Forex Trading Fundamentals

What are Currency Pairs?

A currency pair, also referred to as a forex pair, is the quotation of two different currencies, where the first currency is the base and the second is the quote currency. The exchange rate indicates how much of the quote currency is required to purchase one unit of the base currency. 

For example, in the EUR/USD pair, the euro is the base currency and the US dollar is the quote currency, meaning a certain amount of US dollars is needed to buy one euro.

What are Major Currency Pairs?

Major currency pairs are the most actively traded pairs in the forex market, all of which include the US dollar (USD). 

They are characterized by high liquidity, tight spreads, and significant trading volume. The seven primary pairs are EUR/USD, USD/JPY, GBP/USD, AUD/USD, USD/CAD, USD/CHF, and NZD/USD.


Visual representation of major and minor currency pairs in forex trading including EUR/USD, GBP/JPY, USD/CHF, and more.

Figure 2: Illustrates major currency pairs


Minor and Exotic Pairs

  • Minor pairs: Combinations of major currencies excluding the USD (e.g., EUR/GBP, GBP/JPY)
  • Exotic pairs: Combinations of a major currency with the currency of an emerging or smaller economy (e.g., USD/TRY, EUR/ZAR)

Understanding Currency Pair Quotes

Every currency pair quote includes two prices:

  • Bid price: The price at which you can sell the base currency
  • Ask price: The price at which you can buy the base currency

The difference between these prices is called the spread, representing one of the main transaction costs in forex trading.

Base and Quote Currencies

Infographic explaining how forex trading works with EUR/USD example, illustrating base and quote currencies and the concept of trading in pairs.

Figure 3: Illustrates Base and Quote Currencies


In the currency pair EUR/USD:

  • EUR is the base currency
  • USD is the quote currency

The exchange rate indicates how much of the quote currency (USD) is needed to purchase one unit of the base currency (EUR). For example, if EUR/USD is quoted at 1.2000, 1 euro can be exchanged for 1.20 US dollars.

What are Pips and Lots in Forex?


Comparison of two EUR/USD price quotes highlighting a one pip movement to illustrate how pip values are calculated in forex trading.

Figure 4: Illustrates One Pip

What is a Pip in Forex?

forex pip  (percentage in point) is the smallest standardized price increment in forex trading:

  • For most currency pairs: a 0.0001 change in price (fourth decimal place)
  • For pairs involving the Japanese yen: a 0.01 change in price (second decimal place)

For example, if EUR/USD moves from 1.2000 to 1.2001, it has moved one pip. Pipettes (fractional pips) represent one-tenth of a pip and are displayed as the fifth decimal place in most currency pairs.


How to Calculate Pips in Forex?

To calculate pips, find the difference between two price levels. In most currency pairs, the fourth decimal place represents one pip. For pairs where USD is the quote currency (e.g., EUR/USD), pip value is calculated by multiplying the lot size by 0.0001.

For pairs where USD is the base currency (e.g., USD/EUR), divide 0.0001 by the current exchange rate, then multiply by the lot size.


Example of Pip Value Calculation for a Standard Lot

Currency Pair Example: EUR/USD

Position Size: 1 standard lot = 100,000 EUR

Exchange Rate = 1.2000

One Pip Movement (0.0001) = 100,000 × 0.0001 = US$10


If you trade a mini lot (10,000 units), one pip equals US$1.

If you trade a micro lot (1,000 units), one pip equals US$0.10

What is a Lot in Forex Trading?

Graphic showing standard forex trading lot size of 100,000 units multiplied by base currency symbols including JPY, GBP, and USD.
Figure 5: Illustrates One Lot

In forex trading, a lot  is the standardized unit of measurement for trade size, with one standard lot equaling 100,000 units of the base currency. The lot size directly affects the pip value. For a standard lot of EUR/USD, each pip movement corresponds to a $10 change in value.

Forex trading lot size comparison chart showing standard, mini, micro, and nano lots with base currency units used in forex trading.

Calculating Profit and Loss


To calculate potential profit or loss in forex trading:For a long position (buy): Profit/Loss = (Closing Price - Opening Price) × Lot Size × Number of Lots
 
For a short position (sell):
 Profit/Loss = (Opening Price - Closing Price) × Lot Size × Number of Lots

 

Example Calculation

Trading scenario:

  • Currency pair: EUR/USD

  • Opening position: Buy 1 standard lot (100,000 units) at 1.2000

  • Closing position: Sell at 1.2050

  • Calculation: (1.2050 - 1.2000) × 100,000 = $500 profit

What is a Forex Trader?

A forex trader is an individual or institution that participates in the forex market by buying and selling currency pairs, aiming to profit from exchange rate fluctuations. Traders can be retail investors or institutional entities such as banks and hedge funds.

How to Become a Forex Trader?

Key steps to becoming a forex trader include:


1. Learn the fundamentals

Research, study, and understand essential forex trading concepts such as currency pairs, pips, lots, spreads, leverage, margin, and market mechanics. TMGM’’s Trading Academy  offers comprehensive coverage of these topics. 


2. Choose a reputable trading broker

To trade forex online, you need a broker. Ensure the broker is regulated, licensed, and transparent about fees. TMGM meets these criteria. 


3. Open and set up a trading account

Begin with a demo account funded with virtual capital to practice trading without risking real money. TMGM provides a demo account  allowing trading of real forex pairs risk-free.


4. Start trading with smaller lot sizes and scale up

When ready, trade with small lot sizes to limit risk and avoid excessive leverage. Increase position sizes gradually as your confidence and skill grow.


5. Continue learning about forex trading

 Stay updated on market developments, economic news, central bank decisions, and refine your trading strategy continuously. 


What is Leverage and Margin in Forex Trading?

What is Leverage in Forex?


Leverage  enables forex traders to control large positions with relatively small capital. Expressed as a ratio, such as 30:1, it means you can control a position 30 times larger than your invested capital.

Leverage is a double-edged sword:

  • It amplifies potential profits from favorable market moves
  • It also amplifies potential losses from adverse market moves

What is Margin in Forex Trading?

Margin in forex  is the collateral deposit required to open and maintain a leveraged position. It secures the leveraged portion of your exposure.

Types of Margin

  • Initial Margin:  The percentage of the full trade value needed to open a position. For example, with 30:1 leverage, the initial margin requirement is approximately 3.33% of the total position size.
  • Maintenance Margin:  The minimum account equity required to keep a position open. If equity falls below this due to losses, a margin call may be issued requesting additional funds, or positions may be liquidated automatically (stop out).

How to Calculate Margin in Forex Trading

For a EUR/USD trade with:

  • Position size: 1 standard lot (100,000 EUR)
  • Current exchange rate: 1.2000
  • Position value in USD: 120,000
  • Leverage: 30:1
  • Initial margin requirement: 120,000 ÷ 30 = $4,000

You need at least $4,000 in your account to open this position.

Risk Management with Leverage

Leverage can magnify both gains and losses, making risk management essential for sustainable trading.

  • Position Sizing: Limit each trade to a small percentage of your total capital, commonly 1-2%, to avoid excessive exposure.
  • Stop-Loss Orders: Always set stop-loss orders to cap potential losses and protect your capital from sudden market moves.
  • Risk-Reward Ratio: Focus on trades with favorable risk-reward ratios, typically at least 1:2, ensuring profitable trades offset losses over time.
  • Leverage Reduction: Use leverage levels lower than the maximum offered to reduce risk and avoid forced liquidations.
  • Stress Testing: Evaluate how different market conditions, including high volatility, affect leveraged positions to prepare and adjust strategies accordingly.

Effective leverage management ensures controlled risk exposure and long-term trading viability.

What is the Forex Market

Forex trading is decentralized and conducted over the counter (OTC). Instead of a centralized exchange, transactions occur electronically between banks, brokers, institutions, and retail traders.

 Infographic comparing $6.6 trillion daily forex trading volume to UK GDP, crypto market cap, Bezos’s wealth, and other benchmarks.

Figure 6: Illustrates daily forex transactions 

The Evolution of Forex Trading

The modern forex market  has evolved significantly since its inception:

  • Pre-1970s:  Fixed exchange rates under the Bretton Woods Agreement

  • 1971:  Shift to floating exchange rates following the collapse of Bretton Woods

  • 1980s-1990s:  Introduction of electronic trading platforms and expanded institutional participation

  • Early 2000s:  Growth of online retail forex brokers, broadening access for individual traders

  • Present day:  Advanced algorithmic trading, mobile platforms, and integration with other asset classes

Today'’s forex market is a sophisticated ecosystem where central banks, commercial banks, investment firms, corporations, and retail traders interact continuously across global markets.

What Moves the Forex Market?

Economic Factors

Central Bank Policies

Central banks play a pivotal role in monetary policy, directly impacting currency valuations. Interest rates are a primary instrument.

Economic Indicators

Key economic releases influencing forex markets include:
Table listing economic indicators and their impact including GDP, employment reports, inflation, retail sales, and manufacturing indices relevant to what moves the forex market.

Geopolitical Events

  • Elections: Political changes signaling policy shifts affecting currencies
  • Trade Agreements/Disputes: Affect economic relations between countries
  • Regional Conflicts: Generate uncertainty and risk aversion in markets
  • Regulatory Changes: New financial regulations impacting capital flows

Market Psychology

Market Sentiment

Market sentiment reflects traders’ overall outlook, influencing price movements beyond fundamental data. It plays a key role in short-term trends and momentum-driven markets.


Trade Forex with TMGM

TMGM wins Best Multi-Asset Broker APAC award at 2024 Brokersview ceremony, recognizing excellence in forex trading and multi-asset brokerage.

TMGM is a leading forex broker providing excellent trading conditions, advanced technology, and comprehensive support for traders at all experience levels.

Why Choose TMGM for Forex Trading

TMGM is a premier forex broker  delivering exceptional trading conditions, cutting-edge technology, and extensive support for traders of all skill levels.

TMGM offers tight spreads starting from 0.0 pips on major currency pairs with competitive commission structures. Traders can access leverage up to 1:1000, benefiting from deep liquidity aggregated from multiple tier-1 liquidity providers for efficient trade execution. The platform ensures rapid execution speeds, averaging under 30 milliseconds, minimizing slippage and enhancing trading efficiency.

TMGM supports MetaTrader 4 (MT4) and MetaTrader 5 (MT5), available on PC, Mac, tablet, and mobile devices, accommodating diverse trading preferences. The broker provides educational resources, including a Trading Academy, live webinars, daily market analysis, trading guides, and a real-time economic calendar  to keep traders well-informed. Clients also benefit from multilingual support, dedicated account managers, and efficient withdrawal processing, ensuring a seamless trading experience.

Free Forex Trading Courses and Resources

Achieving success in forex trading requires skill, knowledge, and practice. TMGM provides all necessary resources, including a wide range of free forex trading courses  and webinars. It also offers a free demo account  funded with US$100,000 in virtual capital to help build confidence in a risk-free environment.

Additionally, TMGM delivers trading strategy insights, market analysis, and new articles  for traders of all experience levels—whether you' are a complete beginner or an experienced trader, TMGM has resources tailored for you. Register for an account today!


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