Bond Trading Volumes

Forex Trading And Pricing Explained

I received the following question from one of my list members today:

“… you referred to the currency exchange cash market and the fact that this is basically a market between banks across countries. Does this mean that, for example, the EURO/USD exchange rate is set between the Federal Reserve and the ECB? Is that how a price is established without the benefit of any trading on any listed exchange anywhere else? Thanks for the brief education on this particular point.” – Stan Z.

The forex spot market is primarily an “interbank” market. That means the majority of the trading volume is done bank-to-bank such as between Citibank and Goldman Sachs, for example. This trading is generally done on behalf of banking customers such as multinational corporations, though the banks also trade with each other both to hedge their currency exposure and to take on trading positions.

This sort of market structure is the same as the one for most cash market government debt trading, such as that for US Treasury Bonds and the like. You can think of it like the over-the-counter market for stocks. Those trades don’t go through an exchange, but are done directly broker-to-broker.

In both forex and fixed income there are big players like hedge funds that take part along with the commercial and investment banks. The world’s central banks are also major participants at this level in their attempts to influence exchange rates (forex) and/or interest rates (fixed income).

The transaction sizes in the interbank market are large – generally $5 million and up. Obviously, the average individual trader is not going to be trading anywhere near that big. That’s where the online brokers and forex dealers come in to play. They allow small traders to do transactions in significantly lower amounts. In fact, there is at least one which will do trades as small as $1.

Here is where some folks get a bit nervous. Many of these forex dealers actually act as market makers with their clientele. By that I mean they take the other side of the trades that are done by their customers. This is something which can sometimes happen in the stock market as well, especially with OTC stocks. The concern that folks have with this is the implied conflict of interest in terms of price execution that creates. Is a dealer who will be taking the other side of your trade going to be acting in your best interest when you put on a trade?

While it may be true that some unscrupulous dealers may take advantage of their customers in that way, I am quite confident that most of them are not acting against their customers. They simply provide liquidity to the market and earn the spread to do so. When they have an excessive exposure to any particular currency, they offset it by hedging in the interbank market or with another dealer. That’s basically the same as a floor trader on any exchange.

Getting to the question of how prices get set, the market does that, not the central banks. Each individual bank and dealer is actually setting its own price. That might sound a bit strange in that it would create different rates all over the place. The fact of the matter is, however, that prices between dealers and banks are almost always going to be very, very close. There are services such as Reuters where dealer prices are aggregated and presented in data feeds, allowing everyone to know the current (and historical) market rates. Arbitrage trading keeps dealers from quoting prices too far away from each other.

There is also trading in the futures market, and the relatively new currency exchange traded funds (ETFs). The activity there, while only a small fraction of the global market volume, also contributes to keeping prices in line across the board.

About the Author

John Forman is author of
The Essentials of Trading
(Wiley – April 2006), and a near 20 year market veteran. For more information on forex trading, check out John’s
free forex trading guide
.


James Bond The Connoisseur Collection Volume 2 Trading Card Base Set


James Bond The Connoisseur Collection Volume 2 Trading Card Base Set


$29.99


For Sale Is A Complete Trading Card Base Set….

James Bond The Connoisseur Collection Volume 3 Trading Card Base Set


James Bond The Connoisseur Collection Volume 3 Trading Card Base Set


$29.99


For Sale Is A Complete Trading Card Base Set….

The Eurodollar Futures and Options Handbook (McGraw-Hill Library of Investment and Finance)


The Eurodollar Futures and Options Handbook (McGraw-Hill Library of Investment and Finance)


$38.26


Eurodollar trading volume is exploding, with no end in sight tools phenomenal growth. The Eurodollar Futures and Options Handbook provides traders and investors with the complete range of current research on Eurodollar futures and options, now the most widely traded money market contracts in the world. The only current book on this widely-followed topic, it features chapters written by Eurodollar …

How I Trade and Invest in Stocks and Bonds


How I Trade and Invest in Stocks and Bonds


$6.18


Richard Wyckoff was a Wall Street legend. Not only did he make a fortune, but he also was the longtime editor and publisher of The Magazine of Wall Street and the developer of successful methods to analyze and forecast the market. In this book, Wyckoff lays out his insider’s knowledge for everyone, especially those who are willing to study before risking one’s own money. After all, he wrote, “in W…

Price Action Trading


Price Action Trading


$113.71


Extract from the Preface: ’1. What the book coversThis book is about day trading. Using the price action itself, rather than any of the usual array of indicators based on it. The US 30-year Treasury Bond Futures is the favoured instrument – the T-Bonds, as they are commonly called. There are good reasons for choosing this instrument to learn to trade – one being that they do not require a detailed…

The Management of Bond Investments and Trading of Debt


The Management of Bond Investments and Trading of Debt


$179.44


Written for managers and professionals in business and industry, and using a minimum of mathematical language, The Management of Bond Investments and the Trading of Debt addresses three key issues: Bondholder s options, risks and rewards in making investments in debt instruments; The dynamics of inflation, and how they affect both trading in the bond market, and investment decisions; and The democratization of lending, socialization of risk, and effect of the global economy on the bond market. Financial expert Dimitris Chorafas discusses these issues in straightforward language for managers and professionals in commercial banks, securities houses, financial services companies, merchandising firms, manufacturing companies, and consulting firms, placing the mathematical treatment of the issues in the appendices, available for study but not necessary for understanding the business issues addressed in the book. Focuses on new issues of central importance in bond and debt trading today Uses clear, straightforward language for managers and professionals in business and industry, with mathematical treatment provided in appendices Thorough treatment of operational risk new to books on this topic Author: Chorafas, Dimitris N. Binding Type: Hardcover Number of Pages: 448 Publication Date: 2005/07/01 Language: English Dimensions: 9.54 x 6.76 x 0.98 inches

The Strategic Bond Investor (Hardcover)


The Strategic Bond Investor (Hardcover)


$50.29


Uncover the newest profit opportunities in today`s bond marketplace!The Strategic Bond Investor explains how to maximize your investing returns with bonds—one of the few reliable and stable investments left standing after all the economic chaos. Senior vice president and portfolio manager at PIMCO, Anthony Cescenzi provides an aggressive yet risk-conscious approach you can easily build into your overall trading strategy in the fixed-income market.Completely updated to address the realities of an unpredictable economy, The Strategic Bond Investor includes new sections on the parallels between the credit and bond markets, the power of the New Fed, and ways to navigate the massive price fluctuations of the post-credit-crisis markets. In addition, you’ll find:Detailed description of different bond typesConcrete data on how each one performs in various environments Key economic reports on how market factors like the credit crisis affect bond movements Techniques for forecasting the Fed’s next move—so you can stay a step ahead of changing interest rates Ways of using the yield curve and other indicators to predict the direction of the markets and the economyThe Strategic Bond Investor is a fully rounded education on bond investing, providing you with the know-how for safe, dependable investing now—and well into the future. Table of ContentsChapter 1. The Importance of the Bond Market Chapter 2. Segments of the Bond Market Chapter 3. Types of BondsChapter 4. CDOs, CLOs, MBS, CDX, and Other New NomenclatureChapter 5. The Money Market: Epicenter of the Bond and Credit Markets Chapter 6. Bond Market Basics Chapter 7. Risks in Bonds and Credit Markets to Investors Chapter 8. The New Fed and Its Immense Power Chapter 9. The Yield Curve: The Bond Market

The Handbook of Trading: Strategies for Navigating and Profiting from Currency, Bond, and Stock Markets by Gregoriou, Greg N. Edition ILL, 1


The Handbook of Trading: Strategies for Navigating and Profiting from Currency, Bond, and Stock Markets by Gregoriou, Greg N. Edition ILL, 1


$85.49


Section One: Execution and Momentum Trading; Chapter 1. Performance Leakage and Value Discounts on the Toronto Stock Exchange; Chapter 2. Informed Trading in Parallel Auction and Dealer Markets: The Case of the London Stock Exchange; Chapter 3. Order Placement Strategies in Different Market Structures; Chapter 4. Momentum Trading for the Private Investor; Chapter 5. Trading in Turbulent Markets: Does Momentum Work; Chapter 6. The Financial Futures Momentum; Section Two: Technical Trading; Chapter 7. Profitability of Technical Trading Rules in an Emerging Market; Chapter 8. Testing Technical Trading Rules as Portfolio Selection Strategies; Chapter 9. Do Technical Trading Rules Increase the Probability of Winning: Empirical Evidence from the Foreign Exchange Market; Chapter 10. Technical Analysis in Turbulent Financial Markets: Does Nonlinearity Assist; Chapter 11. Profiting from the Dual Moving Average Cross-Over with Exponential Smoothing; Chapter 12. Shareholder Demands and the Delaware Derivative Action; Section Three: Exchange Traded Fund Strategies; Chapter 13. Leveraged Exchanged-Traded Funds and their Trading Strategies; Chapter 14. On the Impact of Exchange-Traded Funds over Noise Trading: Evidence from European Stock Exchanges; Chapter 15. Penetrating Fixed Income ETFs; Chapter 16. Smoothing Transition Autoregressive (STAR) Models for the Day of the Week Effect: An Application to S&P 500 Index; Section Four: Foreign Exchange Markets, Algorithmic Trading, and Risk; Chapter 17. Disparity of USD Interbank Interest Rates in Hong Kong and Singapore: Is There Any Arbitrage Opportunity; Chapter 18. Forex Trading Opportunities Through Prices Under Climate Change; Chapter 19. The Impact of Algorithmic Trading Models on the Stock Market; Chapter 20. Trading in Risk Dimensions; Chapter 21. Development of a Risk-Monitoring Tool Dedicated to Commodity Trading; Section Five: Trading Volume and Behavior; Chapter 22. Securities Trading, Asymmetric Information, and Market Transparency; Chapter 23. Arbitrage Risk and the High-Volume Return Premium; Chapter 24. The Impact of Hard vs. Soft Information on Trading Volume: Evidence from Management Earnings Forecasts; Chapter 25. Modeling Bubbles and Anti-Bubbles in Bear Markets: A Medium-Term Trading Analysis; Chapter 26. Strategic Financial Intermediaries with Brokerage Activities; Chapter 27. Financial Markets, Investment Analysis, and Trading in Primary and Secondary Markets; Chapter 28. Trading and Overconfidence; Chapter 29. Correlated-Asset Trading and Disclosure of Private Information

The Handbook of Trading: Strategies for Navigating and Profiting from Currency, Bond, and Stock Markets


The Handbook of Trading: Strategies for Navigating and Profiting from Currency, Bond, and Stock Markets


$79.13


No Synopsis Available

How the Bond Market Works by Zipf, Robert Edition , 3


How the Bond Market Works by Zipf, Robert Edition , 3


$13.99


A newly revised and updated edition of the useful bond guidebook covers the ins and outs of the markets, from electronic trading to portfolio management, and examines trends in the various markets, a glossary of terms, and more.

Bond


Bond


$74.88


High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles BOND (Building Object Network Databases) started development in late 2000 as a rapid application development tool for the GNOME Desktop by Treshna Enterprises. Its aim was to fill a gap that traditional Microsoft Windows applications like Borland Delphi, Microsoft Access and Visual Basic filled on the Windows desktop, but targeted for the Linux environment. Its goal was to allow developers to quickly build database forms in XML for backend SQL databases. It has been employed extensively by Treshna Enterprises to develop applications such as PayMaster (an opensource payroll application) and GymMaster (a commercial gym management application). Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Tennoe, Mariam T./ Henssonow, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 100 Publication Date: 2010/10/10 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.02 x 0.24 inches

The Bond


The Bond


$18.71


This book is in New – Excellent condition


Leave a comment

Your comment

The owner of this website Susie Mills is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking Eclipse Ventures Trading to Amazon Properties including, but not limited to amazon.com, endless.com, smallparts.com, myhabit.com or amazonwireless.com