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How to Read Currency Pairs: Forex Quotes Explained

How to Read Currency Pairs: Forex Quotes Explained

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This article covers the most important aspects of a forex quote that all traders must know – including top tips on how to read a currency pair:

  • Forex quote basics
  • Bid and ask price
  • The spread
  • Direct vs indirect quotes
  • Top tips to understand and interpret a forex quote

Forex quotes reflect the price of different currencies at any point in time. Since a trader’s profit or loss is determined by movements in price (the quote), it is essential to develop a sound understanding of how to read currency pairs.

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What are forex quotes?

A forex quote is the price of one currency in terms of another currency. These quotes always involve currency pairs because you are buying one currency by selling another. For example, the price of one Euro may cost $1.1404 when viewing the EUR/USD currency pair. Brokers will typically quote two prices for any currency pair and receive the difference (spread) between the two prices, under normal market conditions.

The following sections will expand on the different aspects of a forex quote. The same quote will be used throughout this piece to keep the numbers consistent. This example is presented below:

Example of EUR/USD forex quote

EUR/USD forex quote showing spread

Understanding Forex Quote Basics

In order to read currency pairs correctly, traders should be aware of the following fundamentals of a forex quote:

ISO code: The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) develop and publish international standards and have applied this to global currencies. This means each country’s currency is abbreviated to three letters. For example, the Euro is shortened to EUR and the US dollar to USD.

Base currency and variable currency: Forex quotes show two currencies, the base currency, which appears first and the quote or variable currency, which appears last. The price of the first currency is always reflected in units of the second currency. Sticking with the earlier EUR/USD example, it is clear to see that one Euro will cost one dollar, 14 cents and 04 pips. This is unusual as you cannot physically hold fractions of one cent but this is a common feature of the foreign exchange market.

Base currency and quote currency example

Bid and ask price

When trading forex, a currency pair will always quote two different prices as shown below:

Bid price and ask price of a currency quote

The bid (SELL) price is the price that traders can sell currency at, and the ask (BUY) price is the price that traders can buy currency at. This may seem confusing as it is only natural to think of “bid” in terms of buying so just remember the bid/ask terminology is from the broker’s perspective.

Traders will always be looking to buy forex when the price is low and sell when the price rises; or sell forex in anticipation that the currency will depreciate and buy it back at a lower price in the future.

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Spreads

The price to buy a currency will typically be more than the price to sell the currency. This difference is called the spread and is where the broker earns money for executing the trade. Spreads tend to be tighter (less) for major currency pairs due to their high trading volume and liquidity. The EUR/USD is the most widely traded currency pair, so it is no surprise that the spread in this example is 0.6 pips.

EUR/USD quote showing the spread

Direct vs Indirect Quotes

Quotes are often displayed in accordance with the “home currency” in mind i.e. the country you reside in. A direct quote for traders in the US, looking to buy Euros, will read EUR/USD and will be relevant to US citizens as the quote is in USD. This direct quote will provide US citizens with the price of one Euro, in terms of their home currency which is 1.1404.

The indirect quote is essentially the inverse of the direct currency (1/direct quote = 0.8769). It shows the value of one unit of domestic currency in terms of foreign currency. Indirect quotes can be useful to convert foreign currency purchases abroad into domestic currency.

Top tips to read forex quotes

  1. Bid and Ask prices are from the perspective of the broker. Traders buy currency at the ask price and sell at the bid price.
  2. The base currency is the first currency in the pair and that the quote currency is the second currency.
  3. The smallest movement for non-JPY currency pairs is one pip (a single digit movement in the fourth decimal place of the quoted price and a single digit movement in the second decimal place for JPY pairs).
  4. The spread is the initial hurdle (cost) that traders realize in a trade.
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Further reading on currency pairs and forex trading

  • If you are just starting out on your trading journey it is essential to understand the basics of Forex trading in our free New to Forex trading guide.
  • For our top trading opportunities in 2019 and major FX forecasts, be sure to take a look at our trading guides.
  • Forex traders often make reference to pips when explaining how far the market moved on a particular day. A pip is a single digit move in the fourth decimal place of a forex quote but be aware of the exception in JPY quotes which is explained in our article, “What is a Pip?”.
  • Currencies and the foreign exchange market have evolved significantly over the years. Our article, “The History of Forex” highlights the events in history that have influenced the market to be the $5 trillion a day market.

DailyFX provides forex news and technical analysis on the trends that influence the global currency markets.

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