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What Is Forex Trading? A Complete Beginner's Guide

Forex is the world's largest financial market. This guide covers what it is, how it works, major currency pairs, and the key terminology every beginner needs to know.

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What Is Forex Trading? A Complete Beginner's Guide

The largest market you've never really seen

The foreign exchange market processes over $7.5 trillion per day — the largest and most liquid financial market on Earth, dwarfing every stock exchange combined. If you've ever exchanged currency at an airport, you've already participated in forex. The difference is that traders do it deliberately, seeking profit from constant fluctuations between currency values. The opportunity is real, but so is the trap: the same leverage that magnifies gains magnifies losses, and most beginners blow up within months. Understanding the mechanics first is non-negotiable.

What forex is and how pairs work

Forex (foreign exchange) is the global marketplace for converting one currency into another. Unlike stock markets, there is no central exchange — forex trades over-the-counter (OTC) through a decentralized network of banks, brokers, and institutions, operating 24 hours a day, five days a week.

Currencies always trade in pairs. When you buy EUR/USD, you're buying euros and simultaneously selling US dollars. The quote tells you how many units of the second currency (the quote) buy one unit of the first (the base). If EUR/USD = 1.1050, it costs 1.1050 USD to buy 1 EUR. If you expect the euro to strengthen against the dollar, you buy the pair; if you expect it to weaken, you sell.

Price moves in pips. A pip (percentage in point) is the smallest standard price move — typically the fourth decimal (0.0001); for JPY pairs it's the second decimal (0.01). If EUR/USD moves from 1.1050 to 1.1055, that's a 5-pip move. Because a single pip is tiny, forex uses leverage and standardized lots to make moves meaningful: a standard lot is 100,000 units, a mini lot 10,000, a micro lot 1,000. On a micro lot of EUR/USD, one pip ≈ $0.10; on a standard lot, one pip ≈ $10. Leverage of 1:100 lets $100 of margin control a $10,000 position — but a 1% adverse move then wipes out the entire margin.

Pairs, sessions, and pip value in practice

Major pairs (all include the USD) are where beginners should focus — tightest spreads, highest liquidity:

Pair Name Nickname Typical spread
EUR/USD Euro / US Dollar "Fiber" 0.6–1.0 pips
GBP/USD British Pound / US Dollar "Cable" 1.0–1.5 pips
USD/JPY US Dollar / Japanese Yen "Gopher" 0.8–1.2 pips
USD/CHF US Dollar / Swiss Franc "Swissy" 1.2–1.8 pips
AUD/USD Australian Dollar / US Dollar "Aussie" 1.0–1.5 pips
USD/CAD US Dollar / Canadian Dollar "Loonie" 1.2–1.8 pips

Three sessions drive intraday volume:

Session (UTC) Active pairs Character
Asian (00:00–09:00) JPY, AUD, NZD Lower volatility, range-bound
London (07:00–16:00) EUR, GBP, CHF Highest overall volume
New York (12:00–21:00) USD pairs Big moves, news-driven

The London–New York overlap (12:00–16:00 UTC) has the highest liquidity and tightest spreads — the best window for beginners. Avoid the low-liquidity hours around 21:00–00:00 UTC, when spreads widen and stops get hunted.

Pip-value worked example: $2,000 account, 1% risk ($20) on EUR/USD, entry 1.1050, stop 1.1000 (50 pips). On a mini lot (10,000 units), 1 pip ≈ $1, so 50 pips = $50 risk — too much. Drop to 2 micro lots (2 × 1,000): 1 pip ≈ $0.10 per micro lot, so 50 pips × $0.20 = $10 risk — under budget. Use 4 micro lots for exactly $20 risk. Verify with the position size calculator.

Pre-trade checklist:

  • Trading a major pair with spread < 2 pips
  • Active during London/NY session (or overlap)
  • Effective leverage ≤ 1:10
  • Position sized so a 1-pip move is affordable
  • Stop-loss placed and pip value confirmed

Three forex mistakes

  1. Over-leveraging. The #1 account killer. At 1:100 leverage, a 1% adverse move wipes your margin; at 1:500, a 0.2% move does. Fix: keep effective leverage below 1:10 — most professionals rarely exceed it.
  2. Trading exotic pairs with wide spreads. Exotics (e.g., EUR/TRY) can have 20+ pip spreads that eat a small account before the trade even starts. Fix: stick to the 7 majors until your account is large and your skill is proven.
  3. Trading news without a plan. Volatility spikes around NFP/CPI can stop you out in seconds, gap through your stop, or trigger slippage. Fix: be flat 15 minutes before and after red-folder news unless you have a specific news strategy.

Advanced tips

Once the basics are solid, add two layers. First, session-aware strategy: range-trade the Asian session (lower volatility, clear boundaries) and trend-trade the London/NY overlap (big directional moves) — same pair, different tactics by time of day. Second, carry and correlation: currencies linked to commodities (AUD/CAD with oil and metals) move together, so hedging or stacking them concentrates risk — cap correlated exposure. Build your full process with a trading plan, risk each trade at 1% using the position sizing guide, and log every pip in your journal. Pair technicals with the support & resistance framework for entries.

Summary

Forex is the world's largest market — accessible, liquid, and educational, but not easy money. Currencies trade in pairs, move in pips, and use lots and leverage to scale size. Trade the majors during London/NY, keep effective leverage below 1:10, and size every position from your stop. Treat forex as a skill that takes months to develop; protect your capital first, profit second. Open a demo account, focus on one major pair, and trade micro lots until your process is proven.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk