Quote from lachie74:
I'm using TWS and no volume is displayed for any of my IDEALPRO pairs.
I use Metatrader for charting from a different data source that does include volume.
Quote from Trader KGB:
Yes and no. There is no real-time spot FX volume data released by any ECN, broker, or market maker. The only FX volume available to the retail trader is that of the CME FX futures.
HotSpot does not provide it, nor does Dukascopy (at least they didn't when I was a client of theirs). I don't see volume data in either platform.Quote from snackly:
Are you sure about that? Sorry to doubt you, it just doesn't sound right. I am sure HotSpot provides it, DukasCopy provides it, why doesn't IB provide it?
Yes they have the volume data on client transactions, but they're not technically "hiding it" per se. IB theoretically could publish the volume data of their client transactions (if doing so isn't blocked in their bank agreements), but I'm not even sure what benefit it would be. The volume in the CME FX futures is likely far, far greater than whatever spot volume IB clients are doing, so as a general volume indicator, the CME is the better option.And what do you mean yes and no?
Quote from Trader KGB:
HotSpot does not provide it, nor does Dukascopy (at least they didn't when I was a client of theirs). I don't see volume data in either platform.
Yes they have the volume data on client transactions, but they're not technically "hiding it" per se. IB theoretically could publish the volume data of their client transactions (if doing so isn't blocked in their bank agreements), but I'm not even sure what benefit it would be. The volume in the CME FX futures is likely far, far greater than whatever spot volume IB clients are doing, so as a general volume indicator, the CME is the better option.
Oh no, not even close. Off the back of my hand, I'd say it's around 5% (that's in the EuroFX, significantly less in the other currencies). If you google the BIS Triennial Survey, the latest report released this year shows several tables breaking down the $3T in daily FX trading amongst spot, swaps, forwards, by currency, etc. You could then compare this data to volume data from the CME to get your percentage. I roughly recall the activity in EUR/USD alone being around $800B/day globally. I'm not sure if that includes futures in that total (the BIS report will specify), but as of right now, today's CME volume in the EuroFX is 45B euros notional. So there's the roughly 5-8%. The other currency futures are less liquid, so the percentages could vary more (likely to the downside).Quote from snackly:
Interesting, I had considered using the pricing of FX futures and options as indicators, but not considered the volume. Is the volume of FX futures now roughly half or more than half of the daily FX trading globally (aggregate of spot + futures/options) ?
I can't say for certain. But the volume of the CME FX likely trumps that of any individual broker, so its data does have value from a spot comparison perspective.I guess my question is if you're using the technique of Volume Spread Analysis, will the volume of the CME FX futures give you indications in the spot trading volume?
I'm not familiar with VSA so I can't comment there. IB does provide bid and ask size in their tick data, as does MBT, and likely HotSpot.Again I read in a description about VSA that using the volume in the ticks of FX can be substituted for the trade volume. By that I take it it was meant to use the bid/volume and ask/volume of each tick for a given bar.
Does that make sense? That much IB and HotSpot do provide yes?