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FOREX Order Types: The different types of
FOREX orders
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A trader has at his disposal
different types of orders to make FOREX trades. You need to have a
clear understanding
of each forex order type to be a successful FOREX trader.
Market Order –
is an order to buy
or sell at the current market price. They can be used to enter or exit
a trade.
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Market orders should be used with care
because in fast-moving markets
there may be a difference between the price seen at the time a market
order is given and the actual price of the transaction. This is due to
slippage – the amount the market moves in the few seconds between
giving an order and having it executed. Slippage could result in a loss
or gain of several pips.
Limit Order – is an
order to buy or sell at a certain limit. They can be used to buy
currency below the market price or sell currency above the market
price. When buying, your order is executed when the market falls to
your limit order price. When selling, your order is executed when the
market rises to your limit order price. There is no slippage with limit
orders.
Stop Order – is an
order to buy above the market or to sell below the market. They are
most commonly used as stop-loss orders to limit losses if the market
moves contrary to what the trader expected. A stop-loss order will sell
the currency if the market falls below the point set by the trader.
One Cancels the Other (OCO)
– this order is used when placing a limit order and a stop-loss
order at the same time. If either order is executed the other is
cancelled, allowing the trader to make a transaction without monitoring
the market. If the market falls, the stop-loss order will be executed,
but if the market rises to the level of the limit order, the currency
will be sold at a profit.
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Example OCO Transaction:
Buy: 1 standard lot EUR/USD @ 1.3228 =
$132,280
Pip Value: 1 pip = $10
Stop-Loss: 1.3203
Limit: 1.3328
This is an order to buy US dollars at
1.3328 and to sell them if they fall to 1.3203 (resulting in a loss of
25 pips or $250) or to sell them if they rise to 1.3328 (resulting in a
profit of 100 pips or $1,000).
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Here's another example:
The current bid/ask price for US
dollars and Canadian dollars is
USD/CDN 1.2152/57
...meaning you can buy $1 US for 1.2152
CDN or sell 1.2157 CDN for $1 US.
If you think that the US dollar (USD)
is undervalued against the Canadian dollar (CDN) you would buy USD
(simultaneously selling CDN) and wait for the US dollar to rise.
This is the transaction: Buy USD: 1
standard lot USD/CDN @ 1.2157 = $121,570 CDN
Pip Value: 1 pip = $10
Stop-Loss: 1.2147
Margin: $1,000 (1%)
You are buying US$100,000 and selling
CDN$121,570. Your stop loss order will be executed if the dollar falls
below 1.2147, in which case you will lose $100.
However, USD/CDN rises to 1.2192/87.
You can now sell $1 US for 1.2192 CDN or sell 1.2187 CDN for $1 US.
Because you entered the transaction by
buying US dollars (buying long), you must now sell US dollars and buy
back CDN dollars to realize your profit.
You sell US$100,000 at the current
USD/CDN rate of 1.2192, and receive 121,920 CDN for which you
originally paid CDN$121,570. Your profit is $350 Canadian dollars or
US$287.19 (350 divided by the current exchange rate of 1.2187)
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