Forex
rates Forecast
is provided
by FOREX Company.
It’s not easy to forecast the
forex markets, but it’s what thousands of forex traders and
brokers do every day, with varying degrees of success. Like
forecasting the weather, predicting the forex market is
sometimes a crapshoot, sometimes a guessing game, and always
an adventure.
There are two basic
philosophies on how to forecast the forex markets. One is
technical analysis; the other is fundamental analysis. We’ll
look at them both.
The technical approach examines
past market action and uses that data to predict the future
to forecast forex market. Previous trends in most areas of
life are almost always good indicators of the future; forex
is no different. People have not changed much in the decades
since the forex market was created. People still buy and
sell and react to stimuli in much the same way as they did
50 years ago.
Since forex rates change
constantly throughout the day, every day, looking at all the
years of past data can be daunting. Smart analysts learned
to look at the big picture, to skip the minor details and
examine trends over a longer period of time.
Using fundamental analysis to
forecast forex markets is a bit more in-depth, but it can
also be highly accurate. Basically, fundamental analysis
means forecasting the market based on external factors --
political moves, government involvement, social movements,
even the weather. Someone good at fundamental analysis might
forecast forex drop-offs because he knows a country’s
government is unstable at the moment, or increases because
the country has just elected a popular new leader. Anything
that can affect a nation’s economy can affect the exchange
rates, and that’s what a fundamental analyst uses to guess
at the forex market’s future
Naturally, this means having to
know a particular country in-depth, which is hard to do for
more than a few countries at a time. (It becomes even more
complicated when trying to forecast the euro, since several
different countries use that currency.) But having that kind
of intricate knowledge makes it much, much easier to
forecast forex trends.
Most good traders use a mixture
of both processes, technical and fundamental. For example, a
trader might see that a country is currently facing a
particularly strong hurricane season (fundamental) and know
that in the past, strong hurricane seasons have meant a
weaker economy for that nation (technical). Thus, he can
predict down-turns for that nation with some degree of
confidence.
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