Forex Currency Charts
EUR/USD
. Dollar weakness drives
EUR/USD higher
. US recovery and strong influx of foreign
demand will send EUR/USD lower
USD/JPY
. Japanese government
intervention to weaken their currency sends
USD/JPY higher
. Gains in Nikkei and demand for Japanese
assets drive USD/JPY down
GBP/USD
. High yield and
attractive growth in the UK drives GBP/USD
higher
. Speculation about UK adopting the euro
will send the GBP/USD lower
USD/CHF
. Global stability and
global recovery will send USD/CHF higher
. USD/CHF rallies on geopolitical
instability
EUR/CHF
. Swiss government uses
verbal intervention to weaken the franc,
sending EUR/CHF higher
. If inflation took off in Germany and
France it could drive EUR/CHF lower
AUD/USD
. Rising commodity prices
sends AUD/USD higher
. Drought hurts Australian economy and
AUD/USD
USD/CAD
. Canadian economic
underperformance against US sends USD/CAD
higher
. Higher interest rates and rebounding labor
market in Canada will help to drive USD/CAD
lower
NZD/USD
. Increased tourism and
migration into New Zealand drives the
NZD/USD higher
. Weakness in the Australian dollar sends
the NZD/USD lower
EUR/GBP
. Speculation about UK
adopting the euro will send the EUR/GBP
higher
. Faster UK growth over Eurozone growth will
drive EUR/GBP lower
EUR/JPY
. Fears of Japanese
banking crisis will send EUR/JPY higher
. Eurozone recession will drive EUR/JPY
lower
GBP/JPY
. Interest rate hikes by
the Bank of England will send GBP/JPY higher
. Strong demand for Japanese assets will
drive GBP/JPY lower
CHF/JPY
. Middle East conflict
and volatility in oil prices will drive
CHF/JPY higher
. Geopolitical stability will send CHF/JPY
lower
GBP/CHF
. Interest rate hikes by
the Bank of England will send GBP/CHF higher
. Speculation about UK adopting the euro
will send the GBP/CHF lower
EUR/AUD
. Recessionary conditions
in Australia would send EUR/AUD higher
. Rising commodity prices would boost
EUR/AUD lower
EUR/CAD
. German economic rebound
and Canadian weakness will send EUR/CAD
higher
. Canadian economic strength and German
weakness will send EUR/CAD lower
AUD/CAD
. Rate hikes by the
Reserve Bank of Australia will drive AUD/CAD
higher
. Droughts hurt Australia's domestic economy
and will send AUD/CAD lower
AUD/JPY
. Japanese investment in
Australia will drive AUD/JPY higher
. Falling commodity prices hurt Australia's
economy, sending AUD/JPY lower
NZD/JPY
. External shocks to
Asian tourism such as SARS and North Korea
risks will send NZD/JPY higher
. Decline in immigration will hurt New
Zealand's growth prospects and send NZD/JPY
lower
CAD/JPY
. Pessimism towards the
Japanese economy will drive CAD/JPY higher
. Concern about decreased US demand for
Canadian exports will send CAD/JPY lower
Currencies are quoted in
pairs. The first listed currency is known as
the base currency, while
the second is called the counter or
quote currency.
Base Currency
is the currency in which an investor or
issuer maintains its book of accounts. In
the FX markets, the US Dollar is normally
considered the 'base' currency for quotes,
meaning that quotes are expressed as a unit
of $1 USD per the other currency quoted in
the pair. The primary exceptions to this
rule are the British Pound, the Euro and the
Australian Dollar.
Bid - An
expression indicating a desire to buy a
commodity at a given price; the opposite of
Offer.
Ask -
Also called Offer. Indicates a willingness
to sell a futures contract at a given price.
There are 3 main types of
charts in forex. They are the line chart,
bar chart, and candlestick chart.
The line chart
is constructed by connecting daily closing
prices.
The bar chart
is a depiction of the price performance of a
currency pair, made up of vertical bars at
set intraday time intervals (e.g. every 30
minutes). Each bar has 4 'hooks',
representing the opening, closing, high and
low (OCHL) exchange rates for the time
interval.
The candlestick
chart is a variant of the bar
chart, except that the candlestick chart
depicts OCHL prices as 'candlesticks' with a
wick at each end. When the opening rate is
higher than the closing rate the candlestick
is black (sometimes - red). When the closing
rate exceeds the opening rate, the
candlestick is white (sometimes - green).
Technical indicators (for
example, RSI, MACD, Bollinger bands,
Stochastic) help to analyse the price
movements, expressed in forex charts.
The Relative
Strength Index (RSI) is a popular
oscillator. The name Relative Strength Index
is slightly misleading, as the RSI does not
compare the relative strength of two
securities, but rather the internal strength
of a single security. A more appropriate
name might be Internal Strength Index.
Relative strength charts that compare two
market indices, which are often referred to
as Comparative Relative Strength.
Indicator of
Bollinger borders (BOL) is
represented by two lines, which are built on
the distance equal to certain amount of
standard deviations. Since the value of
standard deviation depends on volatilessness
of the price, the lines controls their width
automatically. The width increasing when the
market is more vilatile and decreasing when
the market is less volatile.
MACD -
is the most famous indicator, which is built
on the basis of difference of the average
values. This indicator was suggested by
Jerald H. Appler as the difference between
two exponentially smoothed averages (EMA).
MACD is the most
effective under conditions when the market
swings with high amplitude in trading. The
most frequently used signals of MACD are
intersections, overbuying/overselling states
and divergences.
The Stochastic
Oscillator (STO) shows the moments,
when the price reaches the border of its
trade diapason within predefined period of
time (this is an indicator of speed of
changing or the Impulse of Price). It
contains of 2 curves: the fast (%K) and the
slow (%D).
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