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Home / Learn Forex / Learning Forex Trading and forex terminology / Lesson 2
 
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Learning FOREX Trading is your 1 st step in your way to profitable forex trading.Once you decide to get in this huge market and start learning forex trading you shall 1 st know what is forex as mentioned in the previous section in our website and understand well the different terms used in forex.
   
Learning forex trading, doesn't require alot of efforts or time,however when you start trading you get more experienced in this market within time.Learning forex trading requires a brief understanding of the technical aspects of the financial assets that are being traded. Unlike all other markets, Forex is probably the easiest market for retail traders to start trading in.
Learning Forex Trading has no secrets and it is available to anyone but not all traders in this market care to understand the behaviour of the forex market well and don't give enough time for themselves to learn and are just hasty and thirsty to make profits and their psychology play a dominant role in their trading and so they lose fast.

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Here we show you glossary of forex exchange market and this glossary is a cornerstone in learning forex trading.
 
 
B

Bar Charts Standard bar charts are commonly used to convey price activity into an easily readable chart. Usually four elements make up a bar chart, the Open, High, Low, and Close for the trading session/time period. A price bar can represent any time frame the user wishes, from 1 minute to 1 month. The total vertical length/height of the bar represents the entire trading range for the period. The top of the bar represents the highest price of the period, and the bottom of the bar represents the lowest price of the period. The Open is represented by a small dash to the left of the bar, and the Close for the session is a small dash to the right of the bar.

Base Currency In general terms, the base currency is the currency in which an investor or issuer maintains its book of accounts. In the FX markets, the US Dollar is normally considered the‘base’ currency for quotes, meaning that quotes are expressed as a unit of $1 USD per the other currency quoted in the pair. The primary exceptions to this rule are the British Pound, the Euro and the Australian Dollar.

Bear Market A market distinguished by declining prices.

Bid Rate The rate at which a trader is willing to buy a currency.

Bid/Ask Spread The difference between the bid and offer price, and the most widely used measure of market liquidity.

Big Figure Dealer expression referring to the first few digits of an exchange rate. These digits rarely change in normal market fluctuations, and therefore are omitted in dealer quotes, especially in times of high market activity. For example, a USD/Yen rate might be 107.30/107.35, but would be quoted verbally without the first three digits i.e. “30/35”.

 

Book In a professional trading environment, a ‘book’ is the summary of a trader’s or desk’s total positions.

Broker An individual or firm that acts as an intermediary, putting together buyers and sellers for a fee or commission. In contrast, a ‘dealer’ commits capital and takes one side of a position, hoping to earn a spread (profit) by closing out the position in a subsequent trade with another party.

Bretton Woods Agreement of 1944 An agreement that established fixed foreign exchange rates for major currencies, provided for central bank intervention in the currency markets, and pegged the price of gold at US $35 per ounce. The agreement lasted until 1971, when President Nixon overturned the Bretton Woods agreement and established a floating exchange rate for the major currencies.

Bull Market A market distinguished by rising prices.

 

Bundesbank Germany’s Central Bank.

Buying/Selling In the forex market currencies are always priced in pairs; therefore all trades result in the simultaneous buying of one currency and the selling of another. The objective of currency trading is to buy the currency that increases in value relative to the one you sold. If you have bought a currency and the price appreciates in value, then you must sell the currency back in order to lock in the profit.

 
 
 
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