Thursday, August 18, 2011

How to Use Crosses to Trade the Majors

Even if you don't ever want to trade the crosses and simply stick to trading the majors, you can use crosses to help you make better trading decisions.

Here's an example...

Currency crosses can provide clues about the relative strength of each major currency pair.

Let's say you see a buy signal for EUR/USD and GBP/USD but you can only take one trade.

Which one do you take?

Simply looking at your crystal ball and guessing isn't likely to result in the right answer.

To find the right answer, you would look at EUR/GBP cross. If EUR/GBP is trending downward, this indicates that the pound is relatively stronger than the euro at the moment.

So the right answer would be to buy GBP/USD instead of EUR/USD due to the pound's relative strength against the euro.

Since the euro is weaker, relative to the pound, if it proves to strengthen against the U.S. dollar, it is likely to strengthen LESS than the pound.

If the U.S. dollar weakens across the board, GBP/USD you would make more pips since it would rally higher than EUR/USD.

So GBP/USD is the better trade.


Monster with bling-bling
You can do this relative strength analysis on any of the major pairs...
Let's say you're bearish on the U.S. dollar. How will you trade?
  • Can't decide whether to buy EUR/USD or sell USD/CHF? Look at EUR/CHF.
  • Can't decide whether to buy USD/CHF or USD/JPY? Look at CHF/JPY.
  • Can't decide whether to buy EUR/USD or sell USD/JPY? Look at EUR/JPY.
  • Can't decide whether to buy GBP/USD or sell USD/CHF? Look at GBP/CHF.
  • Can't decide whether to buy GBP/USD or sell USD/JPY? Look at GBP/JPY.
So always remember, iooking at cross pairs could give you an idea of the relative strength of a particular currency.

(See more) How Cross Currency Pairs Affect Dollar Pairs

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