Designed for Beginners
Our beginner-friendly share market course equips you with the knowledge to confidently navigate the stock market. We’ll break down complex concepts into easy-to-understand modules, equipping you with the foundational knowledge to make informed investment decisions.
The course begins on 1st July, 15th July, and 1st August, offering flexibility to fit your schedule.
Affordable Investment – Gain valuable skills for just ₹14,999!
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The term “Forex” or “foreign exchange market” refers to the world market for exchanging currencies. It is the world’s biggest and most liquid financial market. Forex trading includes exchanging AUD and USD in pairs at a floating exchange rate.
Base currency and quote currency together make up a currency pair. The term is used to price coins against each other. Conventionally, currency pairs are reflected in abbreviated form, separated by a slash. EUR/USD refers to a currency pair in which the euro is the base currency, and the U.S dollar is the quote currency.
Due to the market’s volatility and the fact that it offers far larger degrees of leverage, forex is seen as being riskier than equities. However, the negative market consequences may be controlled with the aid of an effective risk management approach.
The Forex Market is available for trading 24×7 a day except for weekends.
The answer is yes. In the year 1992, a person named ‘George Soros’ made one billion dollars by trading in currencies.
Compared with any other financial market, the forex market has the largest national value of daily trading. This provides the highest level of liquidity, which-means even large orders of currency trades are easily filled efficiently without any large price deviations.
Forex traders can be self-employed or work for brokerages, hedge-funds, and institutional investors such as investment banks, multinational banks and corporations, investment management firms, or central banks. To learn how to start forex trading, you’ll want to start with the fundamentals.
Overtrading – either trading to big or too often – is the most common reason why Forex traders fail. Overtrading might be caused by unrealistically high profit goals, market addiction, or insufficient capitalisation.
