expressivecontent.com expressivecontent.com expressivecontent.com
Main :> About Us :> Add Your Link :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Service :> Add Your Article
Search:   
Get Free Links
 
 

Computers & Networking

 

Tour & Travel

 

Home Family & Garden

 

Indoor Games

 

Relationship & Lifestyle

 

Employment & Careers

 

Outdoor & Sports

 

Art & Culture

 

News & Media

 

Policies & Law

 

Technology & Science

 

Investment & Finance

 

Hygiene & Health

 

Education & Learning

 

Teens & Kids

 

Food & Recipe

 

Society & Communities

 

Self Healing

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Companies & Business

 

Estate & Realty

 

Online Shopping

 

Recreation

 

Vehicles & Automotive


 

Main › Investment & Finance › Forex Trading
 

Forex Broker Commissions

 
Author: Eddie Tobey
 

Most forex brokers do not charge commissions. GFT Forex Brokers, like other forex brokers, are compensated by revenues from their activities as currency dealers, including proceeds from buying, selling, converting and holding currencies, interest on deposited funds, and rollover fees.

Many may wonder how brokers work without commissions. The forex dealer is like a middleman. Let's consider the case of a bread middleman. He buys bread at a wholesale price and he sells it at a retail price. So if one is a baker, he can ask the middleman how much he would buy his bread for. Let's say the middleman quotes $1, so he's willing to pay $1 per loaf.

On the other side of the equation, let's say you just finished his last slice of bread, and you needs a new loaf. So you call up the local middleman, and ask him how much he's willing to sell you (a customer) a loaf of bread for. And he quotes the baker $1.25. That sounds reasonable, so you tell him to drop one off for you.

In this example, the bread middleman didn't charge you a commission to either the baker or you, the customer. Instead he bought at one price and sold at another. He will let you buy from him at $1.25, and let you sell to him at $1. So every time the baker has bread to sell, he checks the middleman's sell price. And when you want to buy a loaf of bread, you check the buy price. In trading, this is known as the bid and ask. The bid is the price you can sell at, and the ask is the price you can buy at.

Considering forex broker commissions, the forex dealer will let the trader buy from him at 1.1971 and will let the trader sell to him at 1.1967. The difference 0.0004 is known as the spread. And this spread is where the forex middleman makes his money.

If the trader were to buy at 1.1971, then the instant the trader buys, he is down 0.0004, because if the trader wanted out of the trade, the best price he could sell it for is 1.1967. So as the forex dealer takes varying trades from people, each buying or selling, he can make money from this price gap. Each minimum increment, 0.0001 is referred to as a pip. So the spread in this example is 4 pips. In terms of dollars, for a forex contract of $100,000, this transaction would cost you $40 ($100,000 x 0.0004) or 4 pips. So the trader will find that some companies will advertise a spread of 3 pips on some currencies, usually ranging up to five on others. In forex trading, the tighter the spread is, the better.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Debt Relief Today
 
Technical Analysis - Reading FOREX Charts
 
Home Purchase Loans
 
Forex Trading - Understanding Commissions, Spreads and Trading Costs
 
Low Rate Homeowner Loan: Home Sweet Home
 
CD Rate Comparisons
 
Exclusive Mortgage Leads
 
Low Income Home Loans - FHA and VA Mortgage Loans Can Help You Get Approved
 
Know Exactly What Your Credit Score is Before You Apply For Your Financing
 
Deciding On a Certificate of Deposit
 
 
 
Main :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Service
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.expressivecontent.com - All Rights Reserved.