Is Anyone Making Money In Currency Trading?

Discussion in 'Forex' started by YYNOTT, Jul 12, 2003.

  1. I opened Demo account with fxcm and i made aslo
    some profit, but since my were not real and lack of
    time, i discontniued.
     
    #11     Jul 13, 2003

  2. gotta be kidding MARKETSURFER! you mean:

    am in no way experienced in forex, having only traded it for a month, but i am in NQ/ YM. the differences are smoother trends in ES/NQ, slower moves generally and very little of the ping pong action you see in FOREX.
     
    #12     Jul 13, 2003
  3. zendo

    zendo

    I have never traded Forex but have looked at and tried to trade BP, Euro futures. I found them quite choppy.

    Is the Forex Euro mkt different than the Euro futures mkt, are the trends better? Thanks
     
    #13     Jul 13, 2003

  4. Funny - I've traded FOREX long enough to know just how wrong you are.

    :D
     
    #14     Jul 13, 2003
  5. tatertrader

    That's great that you have experience.
    Would you care to add a comment that may provide some helpful insight ?
     
    #15     Jul 13, 2003

  6. :confused:
     
    #16     Jul 13, 2003
  7. forex is wild and has many whipsaws
     
    #17     Jul 13, 2003
  8. Yes, some one is. He does not come to this board though... Too busy having fun now.
     
    #18     Jul 13, 2003
  9. corvus

    corvus

    Tax advantages are the same for currency futures and interbank market trading. See:

    http://www.greencompany.com/EducationCenter/GTTRecCurrency.shtml

    Leverage appears better and more controllable in the interbank market, imho. A mini FX contract requires $50 to hold, and each pip is $10, an ideal size for a small, experimental trader. A full size contract requires $2000, and each pip is worth $100; powerful leverage for a trader with experience in the market. A CME Euro FX contract, approximately the same $ size as the full-size interbank contract, requires $1350 at IB and each pip is worth $12.50.

    The spread in the Euro future is 3 pips right now. Three pips is $37.50 and you pay $2.40 in commissions, a total of $39.90 for entry. The spread at FXCM on the EUR/USD is 4 pips (yes, that is on the high side), or $40 on a mini contract. A full-size contract costs 10x that for entry, or $400. However, 1 full-size fx contract is 8x per pip a CME Euro contract...8 x $39.90 is $319.20 (and requires $10,800 in capital to enter).

    Bottom line? I think you save your self $80/entrance by going with the CME full-size contract, but you require more capital tied up. I think my math is correct there... :)

    And there are other issues too that lean me towards these interbank brokers. Stops, for instance. I don't know how well market orders are received in the CME Euro futures market, but I'd imagine that you'd lose perhaps a few more pips in a transaction, perhaps alot more in a fast market. However, several of these interbank fx brokers guarantee their stops up to $2 million (20 full-size interbank contracts) meaning you can rest a little easier at night knowing your stop, if it is hit, will execute at the price you specified.

    And just the notion that these guys are willing to guarantee stops up to 20 full-size contracts gives you a sense of the liquidity in that market. I am not sure how liquid the CME Euro futures market is, but it's worth considering. Can you hit it with 160 contracts (8 x 20) in a market order (ie your stop was hit) and receive no slippage?
     
    #19     Jul 13, 2003

  10. ok, as i stated, i am very inexperienced in forex. however my 30 days have been almost one long trend.....

    thanks,

    surfer:)
     
    #20     Jul 13, 2003