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Inviduals scalping in the Forex Market
There are several individuals that act in the Forex market, the traders are usually divided into two groups:
The first one in composed by the hedgers account that represent less than the 5%, consists on business and other kind of organizations competing in the international trade. Their main aim is to diminish or neutralize the currency fluctuations’ impact by using different market tools.
The other percentage (95%) is composed by the speculators account, the private companies and individuals, the public organizations and banks. Their purpose is to get profit from the fluctuations in the exchange of currencies, ought to that the Forex market can enjoy its liquidity.
Talking about the individuals acting in the Forex market we also have to mention the market makers. Almost all the deals are made by traders (mention above) and market makers in conjunction.
The market makers are the counter part to the clients, they don’t operate as trustee intermediaries. They perform their clients’ hedging according to their policy that covers different guidelines and agreements. The commonest examples are banks or trading platforms, they don’t represent the client as an intermediary, but use their money for buying and selling financial instruments. They don’t have a fluid relationship with their clients and they usually manage all the positions as a whole, detecting interesting movements and acting for all their clients at the same time.
Useful charts while scalping the Forex market
The charts are one of the main tools in Forex trading; they are based on the market action that involves the prices. We can find several kinds of charts that can help us to identify behavior patterns, to create forecast and to analyze the market’s conditions.
The charts can be used in both kinds of analysis, the fundamental and the technical ones. While the technical analyses are focused on the “micro” movements, the fundamental ones are focused on the “macro” events (or external factors) that affect the trend of the market.
Among the main types of charts we can distinguish:
The line chart: is the simplest one, in each time unit shows the closing rates creating a homogeneous line. Although it doesn’t show what happened during the time unit selected by the users, is such a good tool for helping to set support and resistance levels.
Point and figure charts: these charts are focused on the price without time specifications. Instead of showing a linear representation of time they show the different trends in the price. This kind of chart is especially useful to filter out non-significant price movements helping the trader to determine the critical support and resistance levels.
Bar chart: this type of chart shows in each time unit that we select three different rates for each one. The common rates shown by bar charts are the high, the low and the closing, but we can also find charts that show one more rate, the opening of the period of time.
Candlestick chart: this type of charts comes from Japan. The units represented are similar as the ones in the bar charts, they show the prices at their opening, high, low and closing rates in candles form for each unit selected. We can find two kinds of candles, the transparent ones that show increase and the dark or full ones, which show decrease. The length of the candle’s body represents the range between the opening and the closing, while the whole candle (top and bottom included) show the whole range of trading prices for the selected time unit.
A brief history of Forex market
To analyze the history of the foreign exchange market we have to travel from the days of the gold exchange to nowadays through the Bretton-Woods Agreement.
The Bretton-Woods Agreement was established in 1944 and pretended to protect the national currencies against the dollar fixed rate of USD 35 per ounce of gold. Bretton Woods was aimed at establishing international first monetary stability avoiding the speculation in foreign currencies.
The weakness of the gold standard system was its facility to create boom-bust economies. A strengthened economy would import a good deal ending with all the gold reserves required to support its currency; as a result, the money supply would diminish, interest rate would increase and the economic activity would slow down until the point of recession.
The Bretton-Woods Agrement was established just at the end of the World War II to regulate the international Forex market. All the countries involved agreed to maintain their currency value within a narrow margin against the dollar and an equivalent rate of gold. With the agreement, the dollar gained a premium position as a reference currency dominating the Europe and USA markets.
In 1971 the dollar ceased to be exchangeable for gold so the agreement was scrapped. Throughout the 1970s the supply and demand forces were in control of the currencies which began to move freely across borders. Prices were floated daily, with volumes, speed and price volatility all increasing while new financial tools as the market deregulation or trade liberalization emerged.
In 1980, the boom of the computer technology began, increasing the transactions in foreign markets. The capital movements through Asia, Europe and America increased from almost 70 billion dollar a day in the 1980s to more than 2 trillion dollar at the beginning of 2000.
With the rapid development of the Euro/Dollar market (we can define it as US dollars deposited in banks outside the US) the Forex trade market experienced an injection of speediness. Similarly, Euro markets are those where currencies are deposited outside their country of origin. Both markets are in a leading position nowadays in the Forex trade market.
What is forex scalping?
Scalping is a trading strategy in which the trader attempts to reach many small profits with small price changes, as it were, bit by bit to win the market.
The scalper is made a relatively low Take Profit, he usually takes 5 to 10 pips. The stop loss is 20 to 30 pips. He holds a position only a few hours, often even a few minutes. Scalpers say “If I make 20-25 pips per day by scalping, then I can every month double my account balance.”
In Forex scalping scalpers are in direct competition with market-makers (investment banks), which has the following disadvantages to the scalper with:
- Slower technology
- Less information
- Less capital
Some traders even think that it is impossible for private investors to earn money with scalping. This is not correct. A scalper can very well make a lot of money. He must know, however, precisely what signals he must respond.

Influence on scalping strategies are:
Volatility: Since scalpers tend to profit from small movements, large movements in the wrong direction for scalpers are quickly expensive. In a quiet market, the scalpers make hundreds of trades, without having received a huge risk.
Liquidity: It’s generally in Forex and other markets so that the spreads with increasing liquidity shrink-Capacity. Scalpers would rather act in liquid markets, because they can thus more opportunities.
Risk: Since most scalpers want to make a few pips per trade, their positions are very large. The market can be a risk for a scalper, he loses with each point a large amount of money. A loss can therefore compensate for hundreds of prizes.
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