Saturday, May 26, 2007

What significant is between asian, european, and US session in the forex market? -

Some people said that the Asian session always go up and the EURO session will counter by the opposite (down)... is this theory true In Forex, there isn t any up and down like you would have in the Dow or Samp;P. Currencies are traded in pairs such as the NZD/USD so if the Kiwi goes up, the dollar by definition, goes down. The dollar may go up against once currency and at the same time go down against the other. This in fact happened the other day when the Bank of Japan announced a rate hike - dollar up against the Yen but down against the Aussie. The market is open 24 hours beginning Sunday afternoon EST until close Friday afternoon. There is a good amount of overlap of hours in each market (Tokyo, Hong Kong, Singapore, London, Europe, New York, San Francisco). There are periods when there is typically more activity than others. Much of it depends on whether any economic announcements are being made that day by one country or another. Quite often, things are a bit slow from about 8:00pm EST until around midnight. At that time, people in the eastern parts of Europe are getting up and becoming active. One currency pair may be very active during European daylight hour and slow later on and vice versa. If you are considering trading Forex, one of the things you should do is make a table that shows the number of pips each of the majors move during each hour of the day and find the average number of pips per hour for a month. Once you have a platform, it s easy enough to do using historical data although it s time consuming but you need to be aware of when movement typically occurs. Ermmm They are just the times that the exchanges are open in those regions

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