Trading Conditions
This page explains how it all works, in simple terms.
Forex trading is about exchanging one currency for another—like buying US Dollars with Euros—based on what you think will happen to their value. If you're right, you make a profit. If not, you may lose money.
Currency Pairs – The Basics
You don’t trade single currencies—you trade them in pairs, like EUR/USD (Euro vs US Dollar).
If you buy EUR/USD, you’re betting the Euro will get stronger than the Dollar.
If you sell EUR/USD, you think the Euro will weaken.
Think of it like this:
If 1 Euro = 1.20 Dollars today, and later becomes 1.25 Dollars, the Euro has strengthened. If you bought at 1.20, you’ve made a profit.
The Spread – Your Trading Cost
Every trade has a small cost called the spread. It’s the difference between the price to buy and the price to sell.
For example:
Buy price: 1.2050
Sell price: 1.2048
Spread = 0.0002 (or 2 pips)
This is how brokers make money. Tighter spreads mean lower costs—so always check this before trading.
Leverage – Power with Responsibility
Leverage lets you control a large trade with a small amount of money.
For example:
With 1:100 leverage, you can control $10,000 worth of currency with just $100 in your account.
It’s like a loan from your broker—but remember:
Gains are bigger if the market moves in your favor.
Losses are bigger too if it moves against you.
You can lose more than your initial deposit, so use leverage wisely.
Margin – Your Trading Deposit
Margin is the amount you need in your account to open and keep a trade open.
If you use leverage, only a small percentage of the total trade value is required as margin.
If your trade moves against you and your account balance drops too low, you may get a margin call—meaning you need to add more funds or your trade will be closed automatically.
Always keep extra funds in your account to manage risk.
Pips – Measuring Price Changes
A pip is the smallest move a currency pair can make.
For most pairs, it’s 0.0001.
If EUR/USD moves from 1.2000 to 1.2050, it has moved 50 pips. Your profit or loss depends on how many pips the price moves and how big your trade is.
Market Hours – Trade When You Want
The forex market is open 24 hours a day, 5 days a week—from Monday morning in Asia to Friday evening in New York.
This means you can trade at any time that suits you, whether during the day or at night.
What Moves Currency Prices?
Many things affect currency values:
Interest rates – Higher rates often attract more investors.
Economic news – Jobs reports, inflation data, and GDP numbers matter.
Political events – Elections or global tensions can cause big swings.
Market mood – If most traders think a currency will rise, it often does.
We provide free daily updates and economic calendars to help you stay informed.
Types of Trading – Find Your Style
Style How Long You Hold Best For Scalping Seconds to minutes Quick, small profits Day Trading Same day Active traders Swing Trading Days to weeks Watching trends Position Trading Weeks to years Long-term outlook You can try all styles in a demo account before using real money.
Your Tools for Smart Trading
We give you everything you need to trade responsibly:
Stop-loss orders – Automatically close a trade if it hits a loss level you choose.
Take-profit orders – Lock in profits when your target is reached.
Real-time charts & analysis – Make informed decisions.
Educational resources – Free guides, videos, and webinars.
Use these tools to stay in control and trade with confidence.
Final Thought
Forex trading isn’t about guessing—it’s about understanding, planning, and managing risk. The more you know, the better your decisions will be. We’re here to support you every step of the way, with transparent pricing, reliable tools, and honest information.
Start small, learn as you go, and never risk more than you can afford to lose. That’s how smart trading begins