Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Trading Currencies On The Margin

Learn Forex - Trading Currencies On The Margin

For many people the key to Forex trading is the ability to trade on the margin. Without this ability, many small investors would not be able to trade the currency markets. But just what is trading on the margin and how does it work?

A margin account allows a Forex trader to open an account with a relatively small amount of money, and to then control large amounts of currency. In effect, opening a margin account with a Forex broker allows you to borrow money from the broker to control large currency lots. The degree to which you can borrow is known as leverage and is usually expressed as a ratio. For example, a leverage of 100:1 means that you can control assets worth 100 times your deposit.

By opening a 1% margin account and depositing just US $1,000 you can control standard Forex and lots of US $100,000. The ability to trade on the margin can clearly increase your profits, but it can also increase your losses with the possibility that you could lose more than your original deposit. Brokers, however, normally monitor margin accounts closely and will terminate a transaction which extends beyond the margin deposit.

While it is obvious that being able to trade US $100,000 with as little as US $1,000 provides for the possibility of both greater profit and greater loss, we need to look in a little more detail at just how this works.

Forex currencies are traded in much smaller lots than cash is. If we take the American dollar for example, a Forex quote might read $1.3256, rather than the $1.32 which you might expect. This is because in Forex trading currencies are traded in units down to four decimal places, with the smallest unit in Forex currency being known as the pip. In a standard US $100,000 lot therefore each pip is worth US $10.

If our example quote for the American dollar of $1 .3256 were to change to $1.3356 this would represent a change of 100 pips and a profit or loss of US $1000 and, if you were holding US $1000 of currency, a profit or loss of just US $10. This might be significant to a tourist but is unlikely to impress an investor. However, by using your US $1,000 on a 1% margin account to control US $100,000, your US $1,000 profit now looks far more healthy.

Of course your risks are also increased and, if the American dollar moves by just one cent against you on your 1% margin account, you stand to lose your entire account.

Fortunately there are a number of tools available to the Forex trader to help in minimizing any potential losses. One such tool is the stop loss order which automatically closes your position if the value of the currency reaches a level which you set.

One price that Forex traders have to pay for operating a margin account is that brokers normally have the right to override a transaction when they believe that it may result in an unacceptable loss. It may be the case therefore that, while you are riding out a downturn in the market in the expectation of a market reversal, your broker may close out your position and leave you with a substantial loss.

Let's say for example that you sell EUR/USD at 1.2144 (in other words sell €100,000 and a buy US $121,440) in the belief that the euro will fall in price. Your 1% margin account has a balance of $1, 250 and so after the transaction costing $1, 214.40 the balance in your account is $35.60.

After you have entered this position, and assuming that you have not set a stop loss, let's say that the euro gains 0.0263 for a price of 1.2407 making €100,000 worth US $124,070. The requirement on your 1% margin account is now $1, 240.70 and, depending on your broker's policy, the additional funds may be taken from your account or, with such a low balance, your position may be closed. In any event, if the euro continues to gain in value, you will need to add further funds to your account or risk your account being closed and losing everything.

Despite the risks of trading on a margin account it is this ability which makes Forex trading such an attractive proposition to so many people. You should not therefore be put off by these risks, but you certainly need to be aware of them and to know your broker's policy and to manage your account accordingly.