With endless individual forex CFDs available to trade, it can feel overwhelming to decide where to place a position. In this article, we discuss five key factors to help you better pre-determine where your focus could be best spent.
Choosing the right forex CFD for your trading
With the seven major currencies forming over twenty-five unique forex pairs alone, making a choice on which to trade can feel overwhelming, especially when many different variables contribute to the trade outcome.
For most traders, however, monitoring the price action of multiple forex CFD pairs simultaneously is unfeasible, and can often prove counterproductive in finding a trading opportunity.
With the focus being limited, using techniques to better determine where your attention is best spent can be key to maintaining a disciplined trading strategy, and in this article, we discuss some of these.
Top 5 factors for choosing which forex CFD pair to trade
1. How volatility affects the currency market
Sometimes referred to as the ‘heartbeat’ of the market, knowing which currency is not only currently moving the most, but also has the highest propensity for moving in the future, can make the difference in identifying potential trading opportunities.
Measuring the level of current volatility is possible by a range of technical indicators such as Average True Range (ATR), Standard Deviation, and Bollinger Bands, and such information can be factored into your broader trading decision-making.
2. Currency pair backtesting and historical performance
Although sharing common ground, movement in the prices of any individual currency pair can be caused by a number of unique factors. For example, USD/CAD is unique in its connection to world oil prices and is typically said to be positively correlated.
By virtue, it's likely that trading performance will vary across different forex CFDs depending on your chosen strategy, so it’s important to first understand under what conditions your strategy works most optimally, especially in terms of which forex CFDs to trade.
Enter backtesting, a means of testing any trading system using historical data.
For example, imagine a trading system that has one rule: to place a long position on EUR/USD when declared as ‘oversold’ by the Relative Strength Index (RSI), with parameters set to either a 20-pip take-profit or stop-loss. To backtest this system, you would first need to go back to a predetermined time in history, then test each occasion on which this exact scenario happened, making a record of performance.
Once completed over a considerable amount of trades, an impression of overall strategy effectiveness can be ascertained, especially in regards to which pairs your trading system is best suited towards, and can therefore help direct your focus on which currency pairs to trade.
3. Understanding different trading sessions
With the currency market open twenty-four hours a day, five days a week, activity in certain currency pairs has historically aligned with the working days of major world economies, like the United States, London, and Japan.
Traditionally speaking, there are four major trading sessions in the currency market:
- The Sydney session, roughly 15:00 - 00:00 EST
- The Tokyo session, roughly 23:30 - 08:00 EST
- The London session, roughly 03:00 - 12:00 EST
- The New York session, roughly 12:00 EST - 17:00 EST
Owing to how the time zone of each respective country varies, there can be some overlap between each session, with the New York, London and Tokyo sessions typically seen as the most volatile.
Knowing how every twenty-four hours in the currency market is structured can help guide trading decisions, including which forex CFD to trade. For example, we can expect USD/JPY to experience higher levels of volatility in both the New York and Tokyo sessions.
4. Fundamental events and news releases
Viewed by some as synonymous with trading opportunities, the market impact of fundamental news events such as Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP), CPI releases, and interest rate decisions is widely recognised.
*Market volatility determined by daily pip range of EUR/USD. Days that include NFP (red) vs. not (yellow). TradingView 03/05/2021-24/05/23. The information presented is historical information and past performance is not indicative of future results.
5. Spread and transaction costs
The costs associated with trading not only change from broker-to-broker, but will also vary on the basis of what you’re trading and when.
Typically, when a higher number of trades are being placed on any one instrument at a given time, the market is more liquid, which can result in lower associated trading costs, especially in terms of spread.
When selecting a forex CFD to trade, traders may consider how the potential for swap fees could affect their trade, especially on Wednesdays when swap is usually either paid or deducted at triple the usual value.
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Frequently asked questions (FAQ)
In any situation, knowing which forex CFD would be best to trade relies on many different factors, including market volatility, the current trading session, and your own personal trading strategy.
There is no one time that is consistently the best to trade EUR/USD, as this will vary depending on several different factors. With that said, EUR/USD typically sees its highest levels of volatility in both the London and New York trading sessions, which may be more conducive to finding a trading opportunity.
This article and its contents are intended for educational purposes only and should not be considered trading advice.