Foreign exchange market - Forex Foundations
Understand the structure, operation, and historical evolution of the foreign exchange market.
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How is the foreign exchange market structurally organized as a global marketplace?
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Summary
The Foreign Exchange Market
Introduction
The foreign exchange market (often called forex or FX) is the global marketplace where currencies are traded. It serves as the foundation for international commerce, allowing businesses and investors to exchange one currency for another. This market is distinctive because it is the largest financial market in the world by trading volume, yet it remains completely decentralized—no single location or authority controls it.
What Is the Foreign Exchange Market?
The foreign exchange market is a global, decentralized over-the-counter (OTC) market where currencies are traded against one another. When you buy a currency, you necessarily sell another—every forex trade involves a pair of currencies. The purpose of this trading is to establish the relative value between currencies: how much of one currency equals another.
Key characteristics of the market:
The market operates continuously 24 hours a day, 5 days a week, starting Sunday at 22:00 UTC (in Sydney) and ending Friday at 22:00 UTC (in New York). This continuous operation reflects the global nature of the market, with trading following the sun across different financial centers worldwide.
Prices in the forex market are determined by supply and demand, not by any central authority. When more traders want to buy euros than sell them, the euro's value rises. When selling pressure increases, the euro's value falls. This mechanism is purely market-driven and reflects the collective decisions of millions of traders worldwide.
Trading in the forex market is conducted primarily by large international banks that act as dealers in what's known as the interbank market. These banks facilitate most transactions, and their quotes establish the market prices that other traders see.
How Markets Are Measured: The US Dollar Index
One important indicator that helps measure currency market movements is the US Dollar Index (DXY), which measures the value of the US dollar against a basket of major currencies. Rather than looking at the dollar against just one other currency, the DXY provides a broad view of whether the dollar is strengthening or weakening overall.
The chart above shows the DXY over time, illustrating how the dollar's value fluctuates against the broader global currency basket.
The Functions of Foreign Exchange Markets
The foreign exchange market serves three primary purposes:
Enabling international trade and investment. For a company in the United States to buy goods from Japan, it needs yen. The forex market provides the mechanism to convert dollars into yen. Similarly, when a foreign investor wants to buy US stocks, they need to convert their home currency into dollars. Without the forex market, international commerce would be nearly impossible.
Allowing speculation. Traders can speculate on which direction exchange rates will move. If a trader believes the euro will strengthen against the dollar over the next month, they can buy euros now and sell them later at a profit. This speculative activity provides liquidity (traders ready to buy or sell at any time) to the market.
Supporting carry-trade strategies. A carry trade exploits differences in interest rates between two countries. For example, if one country offers a 5% interest rate on deposits while another offers only 1%, a trader might borrow money in the low-interest country, convert it to the high-interest currency, and earn the interest-rate difference.
Historical Evolution of Foreign Exchange
To understand the forex market today, it's helpful to understand how it developed.
The Gold Standard Era
The modern foreign exchange market began in 1880 with the gold standard. Under this system, currencies were directly tied to gold. A country's money was essentially a claim on a certain amount of gold, and this created stable, predictable exchange rates between currencies. However, this system had limitations that would eventually prove unsustainable.
Bretton Woods System
After World War II, leaders recognized the need for a structured international monetary system. The Bretton Woods Accord of 1944 established a new framework: exchange rates were fixed within a narrow band around a par rate. Most currencies were fixed to the US dollar, and the dollar was fixed to gold at $35 per ounce. This system maintained stability but kept exchange rates artificially rigid, which caused problems as economic conditions changed over time.
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The Bretton Woods system worked reasonably well for two decades after World War II, but eventually the strain of maintaining these fixed rates became too great. The US gold reserves were depleting as countries demanded gold in exchange for dollars, and the system could not accommodate the realities of different national economic growth rates.
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The Modern Floating Rate System
The Bretton Woods system ultimately collapsed when the United States ended it in 1971. This decision led to the current system of freely floating exchange rates, where rates are determined entirely by supply and demand in the market rather than being fixed by government decree. This system remains in place today and is far more flexible than previous arrangements.
The shift to floating rates fundamentally changed the forex market. It made currency values responsive to economic news and market sentiment in real time. It also created new opportunities for speculation and risk management, since exchange rates now fluctuate constantly rather than remaining fixed within narrow bands.
Flashcards
How is the foreign exchange market structurally organized as a global marketplace?
Decentralized over-the-counter market
What primary factor is determined by the foreign exchange market?
Relative value of currencies
How does the foreign exchange market rank among other financial markets in terms of trading volume?
Largest financial market in the world
What are the weekly operating hours for the foreign exchange market in UTC?
22:00 UTC Sunday to 22:00 UTC Friday
Which institutions conduct the majority of trades in the interbank market?
Large international banks
What does the US Dollar Index (DXY) specifically measure?
Value of the US dollar against a basket of major currencies
How did the 1944 Bretton Woods Accord manage exchange rates?
Fixed rates within a narrow band around a par rate
What system of exchange rates emerged after the United States ended the Bretton Woods system in 1971?
Freely floating exchange rates
Quiz
Foreign exchange market - Forex Foundations Quiz Question 1: When does the foreign exchange market operate continuously?
- From 22:00 UTC Sunday (Sydney) to 22:00 UTC Friday (New York) (correct)
- Only during New York trading hours, 9:30 AM–4:00 PM EST
- From 08:00 UTC Monday to 18:00 UTC Friday
- Only on weekdays from 00:00 UTC to 23:59 UTC
Foreign exchange market - Forex Foundations Quiz Question 2: Which strategy that exploits interest‑rate differentials is supported by the foreign exchange market?
- Carry‑trade (correct)
- Buy‑and‑hold equity investing
- Short‑term commodity arbitrage
- Real estate flipping
Foreign exchange market - Forex Foundations Quiz Question 3: What event in 1880 marked the start of modern foreign exchange?
- The beginning of the gold standard (correct)
- The creation of the Federal Reserve
- The launch of electronic trading platforms
- The establishment of the World Bank
Foreign exchange market - Forex Foundations Quiz Question 4: What major change occurred after the United States ended the Bretton Woods system in 1971?
- Exchange rates became freely floating (correct)
- All currencies were pegged to the US dollar
- The gold standard was reinstated
- International trade was prohibited
Foreign exchange market - Forex Foundations Quiz Question 5: Which index reflects the US dollar's strength against a basket of major currencies?
- The US Dollar Index (DXY) (correct)
- The Eurozone Inflation Index
- The Global Commodity Price Index
- The International Trade Balance Ratio
When does the foreign exchange market operate continuously?
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Key Concepts
Foreign Exchange Fundamentals
Foreign exchange market
Interbank market
US Dollar Index (DXY)
Floating exchange rate
Currency conversion
Trading Strategies and Systems
Carry trade
Currency speculation
Bretton Woods system
Gold standard
Global Trade Dynamics
International trade
Definitions
Foreign exchange market
A global, decentralized over‑the‑counter market where currencies are traded continuously worldwide.
Interbank market
The network of large international banks that act as dealers, executing most foreign exchange transactions.
US Dollar Index (DXY)
A benchmark measuring the value of the U.S. dollar against a basket of major world currencies.
Carry trade
A strategy that profits from borrowing in low‑interest‑rate currencies and investing in higher‑interest‑rate currencies.
Gold standard
A monetary system, adopted in the late 19th century, that fixed currency values to a specific amount of gold.
Bretton Woods system
The post‑World II arrangement that fixed exchange rates to the U.S. dollar, which was convertible to gold.
Floating exchange rate
A regime where a currency’s value is determined by market supply and demand without fixed pegs.
Currency speculation
The practice of buying or selling currencies to profit from anticipated changes in exchange rates.
International trade
The exchange of goods and services across national borders, facilitated by currency conversion.
Currency conversion
The process of exchanging one currency for another to enable cross‑border transactions.