Forex Trend Trading & Forex Range Trading

Post on: 3 Май, 2015 No Comment

Forex Trend Trading & Forex Range Trading

by Boris Schlossberg, Senior Currency Strategist, FXCM

The overall forex market generally trends more than the overall stock market. Why? The equity market, which is really a market of many individual stocks, is governed by the micro dynamics of particular companies. The forex market, on the other hand, is driven by macroeconomic trends that can sometimes take years to play out. These trends best manifest themselves through the major pairs and the commodity block currencies. Here we take a look at these trends, examining where and why they occur. Then we also look at what types of pairs offer the best opportunities for range-bound trading.

The Majors

There are only four major currency pairs in forex, which makes it a quite easy to follow the market. They are:

  • EUR/USD — euro / U.S. dollar
  • USD/JPY — U.S. dollar / Japanese yen
  • GBP/USD — British pound / U.S. dollar
  • USD/CHF — U.S. dollar / Swiss franc

It is understandable why the United States, the European Union and Japan would have the most active and liquid currencies in the world, but why the United Kingdom? After all, as of 2005, India has a larger GDP ($3.3 trillion vs. $1.7 trillion for the U.K.), while Russia’s GDP ($1.4 trillion) and Brazil’s GDP ($1.5 trillion) almost match U.K.’s total economic production. The explanation, which applies to much of the forex market, is tradition. The U.K. was the first economy in the world to develop sophisticated capital markets and at one time it was the British pound, not the U.S. dollar, that served as the world’s reserve currency. Because of this legacy and because of London’s primacy as the center of global forex dealing, the pound is still considered one of the major currencies of the world.

The Swiss franc, on the other hand, takes its place amongst the four majors because of Switzerland’s famed neutrality and fiscal prudence. At one time the Swiss franc was 40% backed by gold, but to many traders in the forex market it is still known as liquid gold. In times of turmoil or economic stagflation, traders turn to the Swiss franc as a safe-haven currency.

The largest major pair — in fact the single most liquid financial instrument in the world — is the EUR/USD. This pair trades almost $1 trillion per day of notional value from Tokyo to London to New York 24 hours a day, five days a week. The two currencies represent the two largest economic entities in the world: the U.S. with an annual GDP of $11 trillion and the Eurozone with a GDP of about $10.5 trillion.

Although U.S. economic growth has been far better than that of the Eurozone (3.1% vs.1.6%), the Eurozone economy generates net trade surpluses while the U.S. runs chronic trade deficits. The superior balance-sheet position of the Eurozone and the sheer size of the Eurozone economy has made the euro an attractive alternative reserve currency to the dollar. As such, many central banks including Russia, Brazil and South Korea have diversified some of their reserves into euro. Clearly this diversification process has taken time as do many of the events or shifts that affect the forex market. That is why one of the key attributes of successful trend trading in forex is a longer-term outlook.

Observing the Significance of the Long Term

To see the importance of this longer-term outlook, take a look at Figure 1 and Figure 2, which both use a three-simple-moving-average (three-SMA) filter.

Figure 1 — Charts the EUR/USD exchange rate from Mar 1 to May 15, 2005. Note recent price action suggests choppiness and a possible start of a downtrend as all three simple moving averages line up under one another.

Figure 2 — Charts the EUR/USD exchange rate from Aug 2002 to Jun 2005. Every bar corresponds to one week rather than one day (as in Figure 1). And in this longer-term chart, a completely different view emerges — the uptrend remains intact with every down move doing nothing more than providing the starting point for new highs.

The three-SMA filter is a good way to gauge the strength of trend. The basic premise of this filter is that if the short-term trend (seven-day SMA) and the intermediate-term trend (20-day SMA) and the long-term trend (65-day SMA) are all aligned in one direction, then the trend is strong.

Some traders may wonder why we use the 65 SMA. The truthful answer is that we picked up this idea from John Carter, a futures trader and educator, as these were the values he used. But the importance of the three-SMA filter not does lie in the specific SMA values, but rather in the interplay of the short-, intermediate- and long-term price trends provided by the SMAs. As long you use reasonable proxies for each of these trends, the three-SMA filter will provide valuable analysis.

Looking at the EUR/USD from two time perspectives, we can see how different the trend signals can be. Figure 1 displays the daily price action for the months of March, April and May 2005, which shows choppy movement with a clear bearish bias. Figure 2, however, charts the weekly data for all of 2003, 2004 and 2005, and paints a very different picture. According to Figure 2, EUR/USD remains in a clear uptrend despite some very sharp corrections along the way.

Warren Buffett, the famous investor who is well known for making long-term trend trades, has been heavily criticized for holding onto his massive long EUR/USD position which has suffered some losses along the way. By looking at the formation on Figure 2, however, it becomes much clearer why Buffet may have the last laugh.

Commodity Block Currencies

The three most liquid commodity currencies in forex markets are USD/CAD, AUD/USD and NZD/USD. The Canadian dollar is affectionately known as the loonie, the Australian dollar as the Aussie and the New Zealand Dollar as the kiwi. These three nations are tremendous exporters of commodities and often trend very strongly in concert with the demand for each their primary export commodity.

For instance, take a look at Figure 3, which shows the relationship between the Canadian dollar and prices of crude oil. Canada is the largest exporter of oil to U.S. and almost 10% of Canada’s GDP comprises the energy exploration sector. The USD/CAD trades inversely, so Canadian dollar strength creates a downtrend in the pair.

Figure 3 — This chart displays t he relationship between the loonie and price of crude oil. The Canadian economy is a very rich source of oil reserves. The chart shows that as the price of oil increases, it becomes less expensive for a person holding the Canadian dollar to purchase U.S.dollars.

Although Australia does not have many oil reserves, the country is a very rich source of precious metals and is the second-largest exporter of gold in the world. In Figure 4 we can see the relationship between the Australian dollar and gold.

In contrast to the majors and commodity block currencies, both of which offer traders the strongest and longest trending opportunities, currency crosses present the best range-bound trades. In forex, crosses are defined as currency pairs that do not have the USD as part of the pairing. The EUR/CHF is one such cross, and it has been known to be perhaps the best range-bound pair to trade. One of the reasons is of course that there is very little difference between the growth rates of Switzerland and the European Union. Both regions run current-account surpluses and adhere to fiscally conservative policies.

One strategy for range traders is to determine the parameters of the range for the pair, divide these parameters by a median line and simply buy below the median and sell above it. The parameters of the range is determined by the high and low between which the prices fluctuate over a give period. For example in EUR/CHF, range traders could, for the period between May 2004 to Apr 2005, establish 1.5550 as the top and 1.5050 as the bottom of the range with 1.5300 median line demarcating the buy and sell zones. (See Figure 5 below).

Figure 5 — This charts the EUR/CHF (from May 2004 to Apr 2005), with 1.5550 as the top and 1.5050 as the bottom of the range, and 1.5300 as the median line. One range-trading strategy involves selling above the median and buying below the median.

Remember range traders are agnostic about direction. They simply want to sell relatively overbought conditions and buy relatively oversold conditions.

Cross currencies are so attractive for the range-bound strategy because they represent currency pairs from culturally and economically similar countries; imbalances between these currencies therefore often return to equilibrium. It is hard to fathom, for instance, that Switzerland would go into a depression while the rest of Europe merrily expands. The same sort of tendency toward equilibrium, however, cannot be said for stocks of similar nature. It is quite easy to imagine how, say, General Motors could file for bankruptcy even while Ford and Chrysler continue to do business. Because currencies represent macroeconomic forces they are not as susceptible to risks that occur on the micro level — as individual company stocks are. Currencies are therefore much safer to range trade.

Nevertheless, risk is present in all speculation, and traders should never range trade any pair without a stop loss. A reasonable strategy is to employ a stop at half the amplitude of the total range. In the case of the EUR/CHF range we defined in Figure 5, the stop would be at 250 pips above the high and 250 below the low. In other words if this pair reached 1.5800 or 1.4800, the trader should stop him- or herself out of the trade because the range would most likely have been broken.

Interest Rates — the Final Piece of the Puzzle

While EUR/CHF has a relatively tight range of 500 pips over the year shown in Figure 5, a pair like GBP/JPY has a far larger range at 1800 pips, which is shown in Figure 6. Interest rates are the reason there’s a difference.

The interest rate differential between two countries affects the trading range of their currency pairs. For the period represented in Figure 5, Switzerland has an interest rate of 75 basis points (bps) and Eurozone rates are 200 bps, creating a differential of only 125 bps. However, for the period represented in Figure 6, however, the interest rates in the U.K are at 475 bps while in Japan — which is gripped by deflation — rates are 0 bps, making a whopping 475 bps differential between the two countries. The rule of thumb in forex is the larger the interest rate differential, the more volatile the pair.

Figure 6 — This charts the GBP/JPY (from Dec 2003 to Nov 2004). Notice the range in this pair is almost 1800 pips!


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