Every day, over $7 trillion changes hands in the foreign exchange market—dwarfing every stock exchange combined. This massive marketplace operates continuously across time zones, connecting banks in Tokyo, traders in London, corporations in New York, and individual investors worldwide. Currency trading differs fundamentally from buying stocks or bonds because you're always making a two-sided bet: one currency against another.
Think of forex trading as an ongoing global auction where currencies compete for value. Instead of owning a piece of a company like with stocks, you're exchanging one country's money for another's, anticipating which will gain strength.
Every trade pairs two currencies together. Take EUR/USD (euro against the dollar) as an example. The first currency—the euro here—is called the base. The second—the dollar—is the quote. That pairing tells you how many dollars you'd need to buy one euro.
Here's how it works in practice: You notice the EUR/USD pair showing 1.0800. You believe European economic data will surprise to the upside, so you buy at that rate. You've now purchased euros while simultaneously paying with dollars. Three days later, positive manufacturing data from Germany pushes the pair to 1.0850. You exit the trade, collecting the 50-point gain. Those euros you bought are now worth more dollars than you originally spent.
The reverse trade works too. If you'd sold EUR/USD at 1.0850 expecting it to drop, you'd profit when it fell to 1...