|
Getting to Know the Forex
Spreads
Forex is always priced in pairs between two different types
of currencies. When you make a trade, you have to buy one
currency and sell another at the same time. If you want to exit
the trade, you must buy/sell the opposite position. If you want
to leave the trade, you will have to sell Euros and buy back US
Dollars.
These days just about every forex broker is claiming to have
the tightest spreads in the industry. But marketing does have
the ability to be deceiving. The topic of spreads in the forex
spot market is very complicated and often not easy to
understand. However, nothing affects your trading profitability
more.
First of all in order to understand the spread, you need to
know what it is. A spread is the difference between the ask
price (the price you buy at) and the bid price (the price you
sell at) that is quoted in the pips. If the quote between
EUR/USD at a given moment is 1.2222/4, then the spread equals 2
pips. If the quote is 1.22225/40, then the spread is going to
equal 1.5 pips.
The spread is how the brokers make their money. Wider
spreads will result in a higher asking price and a lower bid
price. The consequence to this is that you have to pay more
when you buy and get less when you sell, which makes it more
difficult to realize a profit.
Spreads are important because they affect the return on your
trading strategy in a big way. As a trader, your sole interest
is buying low and selling high (like futures and commodities
trading). Wider spreads means buying higher and having to sell
lower. A half-pip lower spread doesn't necessarily sound like
much, but it can easily mean the difference between a
profitable trading strategy and one that isn’t profitable.
The tighter the spread is the better things are going to be
for you. However tight spreads are only meaningful when they
are paired up with good execution. Quality of execution will
decide whether you actually receive tight spreads. A good
example of this is when your screen shows a tight spread, but
your trade is filled a few pips to your disadvantage or is
mysteriously rejected.
Oddly enough, when it comes to economies of scale, forex
doesn't even act like most other markets. On the inter-bank
market, for example; the larger the ticket size, the larger the
spread is. So when you see a 1-pip spread on an ECN platform,
you have to wonder if that spread valid for a $2M, $5M or $10M
trade, which it probably isn’t.
|