Название | Currency Trading For Dummies |
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Автор произведения | Kathleen Brooks |
Жанр | Ценные бумаги, инвестиции |
Серия | |
Издательство | Ценные бумаги, инвестиции |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 9781119824749 |
The U.S. dollar index
The U.S. dollar index is traded on the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE). The dollar index is an average of the value of the U.S. dollar against a basket of six other major currencies, but it’s heavily weighted toward European currencies.
Euro: 57.6 percent
Japanese yen: 13.6 percent
British pound: 11.9 percent
Canadian dollar: 9.1 percent
Swedish krona: 4.2 percent
Swiss franc: 3.6 percent
The European currency share of the basket — Eurozone, United Kingdom, Sweden, and Switzerland — totals 77.3 percent. From time to time, the currency weightings may be adjusted.
THE RISE OF THE CHINESE RENMINBI
China has been climbing the global economic ranks. At the time of writing, it was the world’s second-largest economy, but the same is not true for the Chinese currency, the renminbi (also known as the yuan). Although the role of the renminbi in global forex trading has surged, according to the 2019 BIS Triennial Central Bank Survey, the renminbi was the eighth most-traded currency in the world, with a share of 4.3 percent in global forex volumes. However, most of this trading activity is for trade purposes only.
The renminbi is a managed currency, which means that the Chinese government controls its value. This makes it very difficult to trade for speculative purposes. Either the currency doesn’t move very much (because it can move only within a controlled band, which means there are few trading opportunities), or the government intervenes out of the blue, creating a wave of volatility that can take you out of your position before you know it.
Most currency brokers allow you to trade the renminbi, but why would you want to? Some people believe that the Chinese government will eventually loosen its control over the renminbi and allow it to trade freely. Due to the importance of the Chinese economy, if the currency could trade freely, the renminbi might become a currency that would be liquid enough to rival the U.S. dollar. For now, though, it doesn’t look like Beijing will embark on a liberal currency regime any time soon.
Warning: A managed currency like the renminbi can be fairly illiquid, so it can experience large price moves if the government suddenly chooses to intervene. Due to this, trading the renminbi is considered risky.
Looking at Currencies and Other Financial Markets
As much as we like to think of the forex market as the be-all and end-all of financial trading markets, it doesn’t exist in a vacuum. You may even have heard of some of these other markets: gold, oil, stocks, and bonds.
There’s a fair amount of noise and misinformation about the supposed interrelationship among these markets and currencies or individual currency pairs. To be sure, you can always find a correlation between two different markets over some period of time, even if it’s only zero (meaning the two markets aren’t correlated at all).
With that rather lengthy disclaimer in mind, the following sections look at some of the other key financial markets and show what conclusions we can draw for currency trading.
Gold
Gold is commonly viewed as a hedge against inflation, an alternative to the U.S. dollar, and a store of value in times of economic or political uncertainty. Over the long term, the relationship is mostly inverse, with a weaker USD generally accompanying a higher gold price, and a stronger USD coming with a lower gold price. However, in the short run, each market has its own dynamics and liquidity, which makes short-term trading relationships generally tenuous.
Oil
A lot of misinformation