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Why Everyone Is Now Trading Forex

Since the financial crisis people are seeing their retirement accounts, their earnings and savings accounts dwindling at a faster rate then ever. People are realizing what Wall Street has always known that traders can profit from any market, bull or bear, rising or falling, and want to profit from them just as hedge funds always have.

Over the long term you are able to make consistent profits and through compounding turn a little money into a large sum. No other business in the world has the earning potential the forex markets have which is why more money managers trade the currency markets compared to any other.

Forex trading is very flexible so that you can trade with very small amounts of money compared to the stock market where large amounts of money are needed in order to make small returns. The fees forex brokers or commissions though the spread charged are very small which makes it easier for people to profit through their trading.

In Forex you can make money under any market conditions, in both trending and non-trending markets taking both long and short positions. In currency trading rules that effect small traders such as the day trading rule which require accounts over 25,000 in order to take more than three intraday trades in a week are non existent.

Since the markets are open 24 hours a day you can trade at anytime, morning or night, and your trading will not interfere with your personal schedule. If you pause to think about how wonderful it is to be able to trade at anytime time from anywhere in the world a sense of excitement arises about the possibilities of trading forex.

With the leverage available in forex you can control large amounts of currency with a very small trading account. This is why people are able to make a lot of money trading in a small period of time starting with small accounts.

Although the circumstances are available enabling people to profit from forex and make money over time it is still difficult for the average person to make a living trading forex. The best way to begin is through the guidance of a professional trader willing to share with you tips to help you succeed.

A simple and easy way to learn forex and begin earning money right away is to take a course where you can trade a profitable system while you are learning to trade. Focus early on in your trading on building a solid foundation and you will be able to be in a positions where at anytime of the day you can make money from the markets from anywhere in the world.

Receive the best forex trading education online from a forex trader and mentor and make money trading forex while learning how to trade. Proven and effective forex trading strategies.

categories: currency trading,forex,investing

Yen Carry Trade is Back!

I can’t remember how long it’s been since I was hyping the Yen carry trade (though a browsing of the ForexBlog archives indicates 2 years). Upon the outset of the credit crisis, forex markets went haywire, and one of the main “beneficiaries” was the Yen, which soared as carry trades were unwound. Now, however, a similar set of circumstances that made the Yen carry trade attractive from 2006-2008 have re-appeared, and it looks like the trade could be on the verge of making a big comeback.

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Practitioners of the carry trade understand that it has a few pre-conditions. The first is low interest rates. In this case, the benchmark Japanese interest rate is only .1%. While that would have meant something a few years ago, however, it no longer counts for much, since benchmark rates in other industrialized countries are just as low. Where Japan has the edge is in market interest rates. Long-term rates have historically been well below the global average, and short-term rates are finally following suit after a 3-year hiatus. In fact, for the first time since August, the 3-month Japanese LIBOR rate – a lending benchmark – fell below its US counterpart: “On Thursday, the yen Libor JPY3MFSR= was fixed at 0.25063 percent — its lowest level since May 2006 — and the dollar USD3MFSR= rate at 0.25219 percent.” In short, the Japanese Yen is once again the cheapest currency in the world to borrow.

In addition, interest rates in Japan will probably remain low for the immediate future, as the Bank of Japan is actually looking to make its monetary policy even more accommodative (I didn’t think this was possible with a benchmark rate of only .1%!), in order to further stimulate the economy and alleviate the risk of deflation. This contrasts with Central Banks in other countries, which are already contemplating interest rate hikes.

The second condition is low volatility. ” ‘Realized trading vols has not been so low for many years.’ For example, three-month implied vols in the euro have slipped from a 25-plus high at the peak of the subprime crisis to levels around 10.68 currently…’As volatility goes down,’ the FX market tends to move toward a ‘classic carry trade environment.’ ” Low volatility is important because it enables investors to make low-risk bets on interest rate differentials without worrying too much about currency fluctuation. However, it doesn’t hurt that aversion to risk is also trending lower, such that investors can borrow in Yen to make higher-risk bets. According to the Bank of International Settlements, “The carry-to-risk ratios, a measure of the appeal of carry trades, have ‘been steadily rising over the past 14 years, consistent with an increasing attractiveness of the yen-funded carry trades for Australia and New Zealand.’ ”

_vixThe pickup in risk aversion – as a result of the Greek debt crisis – may have delayed the return of the Yen carry trade. In January, volatility rose slightly and the Yen rallied as the safe-haven mentality set in. Personally, I find this somewhat ironic, since Japan’s debt problems are even more pronounced, and unlike Greece, it can’t count on a bailout from Greece if things really get rough. Still, the markets work in strange ways, and the fact that the Yen has benefited from the crisis is probably due to the fact that traders can’t short all currencies simultaneously.

The third condition is really an outgrowth of the first two: belief that the funding currency will remain stable, or even decline. In this regard, the Yen is still hovering near an all-time high against the US Dollar, and given the confluence of bearish economic and political factors, it would seem to ne headed downward irrespective of the carry trade. For those looking for specific reasons to short the Yen, there are plenty from which to choose: low economic growth, dismal performance in finance markets, high public debt, dwindling savings and an upcoming retirement boom. As one analyst argued, “Tokyo is due to announce its medium-term fiscal plans in June. ‘Either this will mark the start of a prolonged period of fiscal restraint, weakening the economy again and requiring further monetary loosening, or the plans will lack credibility, in which case Japan’s financial markets would be hit hard. In either scenario, the yen looks vulnerable.’ ”

I don’t mean to get excited, but it’s hard to state a better case in favor of an imminent return of the Yen carry trade.

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