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JPY since 1978 Currencies are traded in fixed contract sizes, specifically called lot sizes, or multiples thereof. The standard lot size is 100,000 units. Many retail trading firms also offer 10,000-unit (mini lot) trading accounts and a few even 1,000-unit (micro lot). The officially quoted rate is a
spot price. In a trading market however, currencies are offered for sale at an offering price (the
ask price), and traders looking to buy a position seek to do so at their
bid price, which is always lower than the asking price. This price differential is known as the
spread. For example, if the quotation of EUR/USD is 1.3607/1.3609, then the spread is , or 2
pips. In general, markets with high liquidity exhibit smaller spreads than less frequently traded markets. The spread offered to a retail customer with an account at a brokerage firm, rather than a large international forex
market maker, is larger and varies between brokerages. Brokerages typically increase the spread they receive from their market providers as compensation for their service to the end customer, rather than charge a transaction fee. A
bureau de change usually has spreads that are even larger. • Example: consider EUR/USD currency pair traded at a quotation of 1.33 In the above case, someone buying 1 euro will have to pay ; conversely one selling 1 euro will receive (assuming no FX spread). Forex traders buy EUR/USD pair if they believe that the euro would increase in value relative to the US dollar, buying EUR/USD pair; this way is called going long on the pair; conversely, would sell EUR/USD pair, called going short on the pair, if they believe the value of the euro will go down relative to the US dollar. A pair is depicted only one way and never reversed for the purpose of a trade, but a buy or sell function is used at initiation of a trade. Buy a pair if bullish on the first position as compared to the second of the pair; conversely, sell if bearish on the first as compared to the second. ==See also==