Monday, April 27, 2009

Forex - Order Types

a) Market Order

An order to buy or sell which is to be done at the price immediately available: the 'spot' rate, the current ratres at which the market is dealing.

b) Limit Order

An instruction to deal if a market moves to a more favorable level (i.e. an instruction to buy if a market goes down to a specified level or to sell if a market goes up to a specified level) is called a Limit Order. A Limit Order is often used to take profit on an existing position but can also be used to establish a new one.

c) Stop Order

An instruction nto deal if a market moves to a less favorable level (i.e. an instruction nto buy if a market goes up to a specified level, or to sell if a market goes down to a specified level) is called a Stop Order. A Stop Order is often placed to put a cap on the potential loss on an existing position; which is why Stop Orders are sometimes called Stop-loss Orders. But can be used to entere into a new position if the market breaks a certain level.

d) Once Cancels the Other (OCO)

An 'OCO' (One Cancels the Other) Order is a special type of Order where a Stop Order and a Limit Order in the same market are linked together. With an OCO Order, the execution of one of the two linked Orders results in the automatic cancellation of the other Order.

e) IF DONE Order

An IF DONE Order is a two-legged order in which the execution of the second leg can occur only after the conditions of the first leg have been satisfied. The first leg, either a Stop or a Limit, is created in an active state and the second, which can be a Stop, a Limit, or an OCO, is created in a dormant state. When the desired price is reached for the first leg, it is executed and the second leg is then activated. 

AN EXAMPLE:

A Foreign exchange quote , e.g. EUR/USD "1.2700 /03" represents the bid / offer spread in this case for EUR / USD. The rate of 1.2703 is the rate at which you can Buy EUR against the US Dollar. The rate of 1.2700 is the rate at which you can Sell EUR against the US Dollar.

Opening Trade

Price Shown

1.2700 Bid  / 03 Offer

Sell Price

1.2703

Quantity size

100,000

Margin Required (2%)

100,000 x 1.2703 x 2% = $2,540.6

 

Commission

$20.00

 

 

The Euro appreciates against the US Dollar and the client wishes to close the position. OFB is now quoting 1.2750 / 1.2753.

Closing Trade

Price Shown

1.2750 Bid  / 1.2753 offer

Buy Price

1.2753

Price/point movement

50 points

Gross profit/loss

50 x $10 = $500.00 profit

 

 

Net profit/(loss)

$ 500 – (Commission $ 20) = $480

Forex - Understanding Margins

Trading on a margined basis in foreign exchange is not a complicated concept as some may make it out to be. The easiest way to view margin trading is like this:

Essentially when a trader trades on margin he is using a free short-term credit allowance from the institution that is offering the margin. This short-term credit allowance is used to purchase an amount of currency that greatly exceeds the account value of the trader. Let's take the following example:

Example: Trader x has an account with EUR 50'00. He trades ticket sizes of 100'000 EUR/USD. This equates to a margin ratio of 2% (2’000 is 2% of 100'000). How can trader x trade 50 times the amount of money he has at his disposal? The answer is that the OFB temporarily gives the necessary credit to make the transaction s/he is interested in making. Without margin, trader x would only be able to buy or sell tickets of 2’000 at a time. On standard accounts OFB applies a minimum 2% margin.

Margin serves as collateral to cover any losses that you might incur. Since nothing is actually being purchased or sold for delivery, the only requirement, and indeed the only real purpose for having funds in your account, is for sufficient margin.