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Preschool>
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Kindergarten>
Kindergarten
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Elementary>
Elementary
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Grade 1 Support and Resistance Levels
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Grade 2 Japanese Candlesticks
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Grade 3 Fibonacci
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Grade 4 Moving Averages
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Grade 5 Common Chart Indicators
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Middle School>
Middle School
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Grade 6 Oscillators and Momentum Indicators
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Grade 7 Important Chart Patterns
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Grade 8 Pivot Points
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Summer School>
Summer School
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High School>
High School
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Grade 9 Trading Divergences
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Grade 10 Market Environment
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Grade 11 Trading Breakouts and Fakeouts
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Grade 12 Fundamental Analysis
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Grade 13 Currency Crosses
- What is a Currency Cross Pair?
- Crosses Present More Trading Opportunities
- Cleaner Trends and Ranges
- Taking Advantage of Interest Rate Differential
- Obscure Crosses
- Planning Around News and Fundamentals
- Creating Synthetic Pairs
- Euro and Yen Crosses
- How to Use Crosses to Trade the Majors
- How Cross Currency Pairs Affect Dollar Pairs
- Summary: Currency Crosses
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Grade 14 Multiple Time Frame Analysis
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Undergraduate>
Undergraduate
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Developing Your Own Trading Plan
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Which Type of Trader Are You?
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Create Your Own Trading System
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Keeping a Trading Journal
- Why Keep a Trade Journal?
- Benefits of Keeping a Journal
- What Should You Record in Your Journal?
- Potential Trading Area
- Entry Trigger
- Position Sizing
- Trade Management Rules
- Trade Retrospective
- Trading Journal Statistics
- Reviewing Your Trading Journal
- Difficulties of Keeping a Trade Journal
- MeetPips.com
- Summary: Keeping a Trade Journal
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How to Use MetaTrader 4
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Graduation>
Graduation
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Forex Trading Scams
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Binary Options 101
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Personality Quizzes
- Which Trading Style is Best for You?
- Which Currencies Should You Trade?
- What is Your Level of Trading Experience?
- Should You Be a Discretionary, Mechanical, or Hybrid Trader?
- What Kind of Mechanical System Suits Your Personality?
- What is Your Attitude Towards Risk?
- What Kind of Stop Suits Your Trading Style?
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Graduation Speech
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Forex vs. Futures
The forex market also boasts of a bunch of advantages over the futures market, similar to its advantages over stocks. But wait, there's more... So much more!
"Hey Mr. Futures, don't our short shorts look cool?"
Liquidity
In the forex market, $4 trillion is traded daily, making it the largest and most liquid market in the world. This market can absorb trading volume and transaction sizes that dwarf the capacity of any other market. The futures market trades a puny $30 billion per day. Thirty billion? Peanuts!
The futures markets can't compete with its relatively limited liquidity. The forex market is always liquid, meaning positions can be liquidated and stop orders executed with little or no slippage except in extremely volatile market conditions.
24-Hour Market
At 5:00 pm EST Sunday, trading begins as markets open in Sydney. At 7:00 pm EST the Tokyo market opens, followed by London at 3:00 am EST. And finally, New York opens at 8:00 am EST and closes at 4:00 p.m. EST. Before New York trading closes, the Sydney market is back open - it's a 24-hour seamless market!
As a trader, this allows you to react to favorable or unfavorable news by trading immediately. If important data comes in from the United Kingdom or Japan while the U.S. futures market is closed, the next day's opening could be a wild ride. (Overnight markets in futures currency contracts exist, but they are thinly traded, not very liquid, and are difficult for the average investor to access.)
Minimal or no commissions
With Electronic Communications Brokers becoming more popular and prevalent over the past couple of years, there is the chance that a broker may require you to pay commissions. But really, the commission fees are peanuts compared to what you pay in the futures market. The competition among brokers is so fierce that you will most likely get the best quotes and very low transaction costs.
Price Certainty
When trading forex, you get rapid execution and price certainty under normal market conditions. In contrast, the futures and equities markets do not offer price certainty or instant trade execution. Even with the advent of electronic trading and limited guarantees of execution speed, the prices for fills for futures and equities on market orders are far from certain. The prices quoted by brokers often represent the LAST trade, not necessarily the price for which the contract will be filled.
Guaranteed Limited Risk
Traders must have position limits for the purpose of risk management. This number is set relative to the money in a trader's account. Risk is minimized in the spot forex market because the online capabilities of the trading platform will automatically generate a margin call if the required margin amount exceeds the available trading capital in your account.
During normal market conditions, all open positions will be closed immediately (during fast market conditions, your position could be closed beyond your stop loss level).
In the futures market, your position may be liquidated at a loss bigger than what you had in your account, and you will be liable for any resulting deficit in the account. That sucks.
| Advantages | Forex | Futures |
|---|---|---|
| 24-Hour Trading | YES | No |
| Minimal or no Commission | YES | No |
| Up to 500:1 Leverage | YES | No |
| Price Certainty | YES | No |
| Guaranteed Limited Risk | YES | No |
Judging by the Forex vs. Futures Scorecard, Mr. Forex looks UNBEATABLE! Now meet the winners who trade the forex market.
While you are logged into your account,
you can save your progress in the School of Pipsology!
- Advantages of Forex
- Forex vs. Stocks
- Forex vs. Futures


