Tuesday, September 23, 2008

THE MAIN 'PLAYERS' IN THE FOREX MARKET



The five broad categories of participants are: consumers, businesses, investors, speculators, commercial banks, investment banks and central banks.Consumers, including visitors of countries, tourists and immigrants, do need to exchange currencies when they travel so that they can buy local goods and services. These participants do not have the power to set prices. They just buy and sell according to the prevailing exchange rate. They make up a significant proportion of the volume being traded in the market.Businesses that import and export goods and services need to exchange currencies to receive or make payments for goods they may have bought or services they may have rendered.Investors and speculators require currencies to buy and sell investment instruments such as shares, bonds, bank deposits or real estate.Large commercial and investment banks are the 'price makers'. They are the ones who buy and sell currencies at the bid-and-offer exchange rates that they declare through their foreign exchange dealers.Commercial banks deal with customers on one hand, and with the Interbank or other banks, on the other hand. They profit by utilizing the bid-and-offer spread. The bid price is the exchange rate that the buyer is willing to buy and the offer price is the exchange rate at which the seller is willing to sell. The difference is called the bid-offer spread. They also make profits from speculating about whether the exchange rate will rise or fall.Central banks participate in the foreign exchange market in their effective duty as banks for their particular government. They trade currencies not for the intention of making profits but rather to facilitate government monetary policies and to help smoothen out the fluctuation of the value of their economy's currency.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Sigma Forex News | European govt bonds edge






Sigma Forex News : LONDON (Thomson Financial) - European government bonds were slightly lower in quiet trade, with a strong performance by equity markets offsetting any risk aversion caused by the fighting between Russia and Georgia.
With little major Sigma Forex Economic Calendar out this morning and European markets quiet for the holiday season, analysts said most trade was corrective with nothing to provide any fresh direction.
"With little in the way of significant economic data or events today there simply isn't much to influence price action in European government bonds," said John Ratcliffe at Thomson IFR Markets.
Meanwhile the news that Russia has apparently reasserted control over South Ossettia has eased risk aversion and any concern that the fighting could have had an effect on oil supplies.
"We expect the situation to calm notably and it would seem likely that the Russian markets continue to recover," said Matthew Vogel at Barclays Capital.
The focus this week in Europe is likely to be on the euro zone second quarter GDP growth figures due on Thursday. Quarterly growth is expected to be flat, but analysts said there is a risk that it could come in on the negative side, boosting expectations that the next move in interest rates will be down.