
The global foreign exchange market is the largest, most active market in the
world. Trading in the forex markets takes place nearly round the clock with
over $1 trillion changing hands every day. It is the main event.
The benefits of
forex over currency futures trading are considerable. The dissimilarities
between the two instruments range from philosophical realities such as the
history of each, their target audience, and their relevance in the modern
forex markets, to more tangible issues such as transactions fees, margin
requirements, access to liquidity, ease of use and the technical and
educational support offered by providers of each service. These differences
are outlined below:
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More Volume = Better Liquidity.
Daily currency futures volume on the CME is just 1% of the volume seen
every day in the forex markets. Incomparable liquidity is one of many
advantages that forex markets hold over currency futures. Truth be told,
this is old news. Any currency professional can tell you that cash has
been king since the dawn of the modern currency markets in the early
1970's. The real news is that individual traders from every risk profile
now have full access to the opportunities available in the forex markets.
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Forex markets
offer tighter bid to offer spreads than currency futures markets.
By inverting the futures price to compare it to cash, you can
readily see that in the USD/CHF example above, inverting the futures
dealing price of .5894 - .5897 results in a cash price of 1.6958 - 1.6966,
8 pips vs. the 5-pip spread available in the cash markets.
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Forex markets offer higher leverage and
lower margin rates than those found in currency futures trading.
When trading currency futures, traders have one margin rate for
"day" trades and another for "overnight" positions. These margin rates can
vary depending on transaction size. Ancofx.com currency trading gives the
customer one rate all the time, day and night.
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Forex markets
utilize easily understood and universally used terms and price quotes.
Currency futures quotes are inversions of the cash price. For
example, if the cash price for USD/CHF is 1.7100/1.7105, the futures
equivalent is .5894/ .5897; a methodology followed only in the confines of
futures trading.
Currency futures prices have the added complication of including a forward
forex component that takes into account a time factor, interest rates and
the interest differentials between various currencies. The forex markets
require no such adjustments, mathematical manipulation or consideration
for the interest rate component of futures contracts.
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Forex trades
executed through Ancofx.com are Commission Free*. Currency
futures have the added baggage of trading commissions, exchange fees and
clearing fees. These fees can add up quickly and seriously eat into a
trader's profits.
In contrast, currency futures
are a small part of a much larger market; one that has undergone historical
changes over the last decade.
- Currency futures contracts
(called IMM contracts or international monetary market futures) were
created at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange in 1972.
- These contracts were created
for the market professionals, who at that time, accounted for 99% of the
volume generated in the currency markets.
- While some intrepid
individuals did speculate in currency futures, highly trained specialists
dominated the pits.
- Rather than becoming a hub
for global currency transactions, currency futures became more of a
sideshow (relative to the cash markets) for hedgers and arbitragers on the
prowl for small, momentary anomalies between cash and futures currency
prices.
- In what appears to be a
permanent rather than cyclical change, fewer and fewer of these arbitrage
windows are opening these days. And, when they do, they are immediately
slammed shut by a swarm of professional dealers.
These changes have
significantly reduced the number of currency futures professionals, closed
the window further on forex vs. futures arbitrage opportunities and so far,
have paved the way to more orderly markets. And while a more level playing
field is poison to the P&L of a currency futures trader, it's been the
pathway out of the maze for individuals trading in the forex markets.
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