Understanding how currency pairs move in relation to each other can mean the difference between a balanced portfolio and unnecessary risk exposure. Forex correlation reveals these hidden relationships, helping traders make informed decisions about position sizing, hedging, and diversification.
When two currency pairs consistently move in the same direction, or reliably move opposite to each other, that pattern creates trading opportunities—and potential pitfalls. Ignoring these relationships often leads traders to unknowingly double their risk or miss natural hedging opportunities sitting right in front of them.
Currency correlation measures the statistical relationship between two currency pairs. The correlation coefficient expresses this relationship as a number between -1 and +1, showing both the strength and direction of the connection.
A correlation of +1 represents perfect positive correlation—when one pair moves up by 50 pips, the other moves up by approximately the same amount. A correlation of -1 indicates perfect negative correlation, where pairs move in exact opposite directions. A correlation near 0 means the pairs move independently with no predictable relationship.
Real-world correlations rarely hit perfect +1 or -1. Most fall somewhere in between. EUR/USD and GBP/USD typically show a correlation around +0.85, meaning they move together about 85% of the time but occasionally diverge. USD/CHF and EUR/USD historically ma...