The Way To Read A Forex Chart
The basic Forex chart is a graphical depiction of how one currency has fared against another. Therefore, you see USD/GBP and USD/EUR charts, showing the historical movements of the US dollar against the British pound and the Euro respectively.
When you open a Forex account with a broker, charting software should be included in the package, if it is not look elsewhere quickly. The charting software will allow you to plot your two target currencies against each other.
A standard Forex chart or graph will have two axes. The bottom axis or line is a time line and can read in any units: years, months, days, hours or even minutes. The side axis will read in units of currency: usually tenths of a cent or penny or perhaps whole cents. Whatever the units are, they will be clearly stated on the chart.
You can alter the time frame at the click of a button so that you can first look at the long term trend, then the medium term trend and finally the short term tendency, which could be as short the last hour or minute by minute. It is especially interesting to watch a currency pair when important news breaks, like, for example, the GBP/EUR when the UK election results are declared.
It could go either way, but if there is a strong vote for one party or another, it means stability, whereas a hung parliament means instability. Stability will probably mean a stronger GBP, but will the international financial community rather a Labour or a Conservative government?
There are thousands of possible currency pairs, but most Forex brokers will only deal in a few dozen. However, it is very hard to remember all that data, so charting is useful to remind the currency trader of recent and not-so-recent trends.
Some people say that charting is more or less a waste of time, because no chart would have predicted 9/11 and that is true, but the fact is in truth, that if you want to gamble real money on the Forex market, you will have to learn how to read a Forex chart.