Foreign exchange rates and the forex market make for a fast-paced, highly volatile system. The market is the largest and most liquid market in the world. Forex traders, like UFX Markets, see an obscene amount of minute changes in currency rates every day. But what’s the purpose of foreign exchange?
How Do You Trade With Different Currencies?
Before foreign exchange trading became commonplace, countries used the gold standard to trade with each other. This meant that though each nation used a different currency (with wildly different values), each country traded based on the price of pure gold. The gold standard system worked for over a century. After World War II, however, the gold standard led to outrageous inflation.
In 1976, the International Monetary Fund did away with the gold standard. In its place, it created a system of fluctuating exchange rates that we see today in forex trading.This allows every country to trade based on what their currency is worth compared to another currency. Most currencies are compared in terms of the United States dollar.
An Indication of Economic Status
If a nation’s currency is considered “weak,” the currency’s home country is usually struggling with domestic issues. Such issues could include economic trouble, an uncertain political climate, or inflation. A “strong” currency is a general indicator of a reasonably strong economy. However, investors pay close attention to which currencies are weaker than others. One of the reasons filmmakers often choose to shoot movies in Vancouver instead of Hollywood is because the Canadian loonie is usually weaker than the U.S. dollar.













