What's better forex or futures??

Quote from spike500:

i like fx for the small cash required, and great leverage.

That's the perfect environment for lots of margin calls.

:D
Amen.

As simple as that.
 
Quote from Hurricane:

I compared live quotes from one forex broker (no commission) to quotes from IB (charges commission) which come from participating banks. The forex broker's quotes were consistently 2 pips wider, one on each side. It was obvious that the broker could pass all orders directly through to a bank and pick up 1 pip per transaction. So much for no commissions.

Even fixed-spread non-commission marketmakers need to eat, nothing's free!
 
Quote from ryank:

I enjoy trading futures but those damn forex.com commercials on cnbc made me try out their demo platform to trade fx. Are pip bid/ask spreads of 5+ normal? That seems pretty darn wide. I've always wondered what a bucket shop looked like, this must be a good representation.

Average is usually 2 on Eur/Usd and Usd/Jpy, 3 on Gbp/Usd and Usd/Chf, maybe 7 or 8 on Gbp/Jpy, reasonable enough.
 
Yeah I think I'm going to give forex a try. Do you basically have to trade to different markets.

You can pair the dollar with the pound or whatever combination.

Do you have to be right on both currencies?
 
I kinda don't get it. You are pairing two different things.

So let's say I pair the dollar against the pound. I bet the pound will fall and the dollar will rise.

Let's say the pound falls(i was correct) and the dollar also falls (i was incorrect) How does that work....do I break even.

Do you basically have to be correct on both currency trades.
 
it matters on the price of the PAIR....which is a ratio.

right now the eur:usd pair is currently at 1.4679.

so if you buy the euro (go long) and the exchange rate goes to 1.4779...and you sell...then you made a 100 pip profit.

you don't actually just buy a currency, it matters what price you got the currency for in relation to the exchange rate (euro vs usd ratio).

the most common pairs are the eur/usd, usd/jpy, gbp/usd, euro/jpy, etc.

so just follow the exchange rate and how each currency changes in relation to each other (i.e. the pairs mentioned above.)
 
Quote from voodoo11x:

it matters on the price of the PAIR....which is a ratio.

right now the eur:usd pair is currently at 1.4679.

so if you buy the euro (go long) and the exchange rate goes to 1.4779...and you sell...then you made a 100 pip profit.

you don't actually just buy a currency, it matters what price you got the currency for in relation to the exchange rate (euro vs usd ratio).

the most common pairs are the eur/usd, usd/jpy, gbp/usd, euro/jpy, etc.

so just follow the exchange rate and how each currency changes in relation to each other (i.e. the pairs mentioned above.)

Alright I think I understand now. So you are watching the currency rate of the pairs. Is that where your profit lies?

How does it work though. Trading commodities is simple. You think gold will go up you buy. I'm assuming everything for the most part is paired against the dollar???

If the euro, pound, can. dollar etc... goes up then the dollar goes down?

I'm also assuming there is a lot less capital that needs to be invested than in commodities.
 
I primarily trade currency futures on CME. I decided on futures rather than spot forex because I wanted to trade options in the same account, because you aren't dealing with bucket shop brokers, you can trade any other futures asset classes in the same account and last, tthose forex commercials on CNBC and Blomberg really annoy me.

What about FX on FXMarketSpace or US Futures Exchange? Is anyone currently trading on either of those?
 
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