There are many features to trading spot foreign exchange and here is where you can read all about them. Since the forex market is operating worldwide, trading is continuous as long as there is a market open somewhere in the world.
Further features include: tight spreads, trading with no commission, leverage, trading 24 hours a day and profit potential regardless of market direction.
FS Insights Pro has tight spreads as low as 1.6 pips on EUR/USD and 40 cents on Gold as well as various account classifications with different leverages from 1:2 to 1:30. When placing your trades the spreads should be viewed as the cost of trading. Tight spreads such as the ones FS Insights Pro offer mean you are being charged less for each trade.
Because of the high-trading volume in the Forex market you can benefit from high liquidity, tighter spreads, better fills on your orders and less slippage. Slippage is where you click on a market price yet get another price by the time your order can be completed. The more volume at each price level, the better those fills become. Therefore, the forex market offers the least slippage of any market.
On top of better fills, the spreads are less, which means your costs are less and you can potentially get into profitability sooner due to that.
Forex market costs are usually worked out on the bid-ask spread. FS Insights Pro charges no commission and is compensated through a mark-up which is added to the spread it receives from its liquidity provider. In addition, at FS Insights Pro we have no exchange fees and no clearing fees.
Another advantage in the forex market is the leverage that is offered. When trading forex at FS Insights Pro we allow you to trade with a leverage of 1:2, 1:5, 1:10, 1:20 and 1:30 on your initial margin deposit. This means for example that with 1:30 for a margin deposit of $1,000, you can control $30,000 worth of currency or with 1:20, $1,000 can control $20,000. Appropriate use of risk management is important when trading forex as a high degree of leverage can lead to large losses as well as large gains.
The forex market can be traded anytime 24 hours a day (Sunday evening through Friday evening). So instead of having to trade during normal business hours you can trade at a time that suits you. It doesn’t matter where in the world you are, you can always trade forex and more trading hours means more trading opportunities. The trading platform can also be downloaded onto devices such as the iPhone, iPad and Android phones which allows for even more convenience and flexibility.
In forex, you can sell (short) just as easily as you can buy (go long). What's more, in currencies, you are always going long one currency in the pair and subsequently short the other.
The below instrument quote an extra decimal for our clients to take advantage of the fraction of a pip. These changes should benefit clients trading experience with fully transparent and automated trading conditions.
Instrument | Description | New Spread* | |
---|---|---|---|
EURUSD | Euro / US Dollar | 1.22542 | 1.22558 |
GBPUSD | British Pound / US Dollar | 1.55648 | 1.55675 |
USDCHF | USD / Swiss Franc | 0.97776 | 0.97804 |
USDJPY | USD / Japanese Yen | 79.205 | 79.224 |
EURGBP | Euro / British Pound | 0.78345 | 0.78375 |
AUDUSD | Australian Dollar / US Dollar | 1.03952 | 1.03982 |
EURJPY | Euro / Japanese Yen | 96.135 | 96.165 |
GBPJPY | British Pound / Japanese Yen | 122.512 | 122.572 |
As demonstrated in the table above, some of our major currency pairs that have traditionally been quoted to 4 decimal places are now quoted to 5 decimal places. And the JPY usually quoted to 2 decimal places is now quoted to 3 decimal places. These additional decimal places are known as fractional pips or a 5th decimal pip.
In the past a 1 pip move (number sitting the furthest to the right of the decimal point) was the smallest price change that a pip could make. Without fractional pip pricing, the buy price is rounded up to the nearest pip, and the sell price is rounded down. For example if the Euro is trading at 1.2254 a move to 1.2255 would be a 1 pip increase in the quote and a move to 1.2253 would be a 1 pip decrease.
With fractional pip pricing, prices are quoted to an additional decimal place for example the EUR would appear as 1.22542 instead of 1.2254. We can call the last decimal place in this example a fractional pip or a tenth pip.
With the JPY currency pairs there are two decimal points because the JPY quotes as 1 USD per 100 Yen, and not per 1 Yen. For example if the Japanese Yen is currently trading at 79.22 a move to 79.23 would be a 1 pip move up in the market and a move to 79.21 would be a 1 pip move down in the market. With fractional pip pricing we would see the trading price for JPY currently at 79.224.
Yes, you should close existing charts on your MT4 and open new ones when working with fractional pips. Any lines or indicators in use should be removed and re-drawn.
No, open positions and orders will be affected when switching from 4 decimal pip trading to 5 decimal pip trading.
Please do not hesitate to get in touch with any questions; our international highly-experienced customer service team are always here to help. Email on: [email protected] or telephone: +1 980 0268 3082.