Every time a traveller swaps rupees for dollars at an airport counter, they take part in the foreign exchange market—the same market where roughly $9.6 trillion changes hands every single day.1
Forex trading refers to taking positions on movements in exchange rates between currency pairs. Depending on the jurisdiction, retail traders may access the market through products such as forex CFDs, spot forex, or exchange-traded derivatives. It sits at the centre of global finance, yet the mechanics behind it are often explained in jargon that leaves beginners more lost than when they started.
This guide breaks down what forex trading is, how the market actually works, the core terms you will meet on any platform, the risks that come with leverage, and what the rules allow for traders.
Key Points
- Forex trading involves speculating on the changing exchange rate between two currencies, always quoted as a pair such as USD/INR or EUR/USD.
- The market is decentralised and trades roughly $9.6 trillion a day across global sessions, which is why prices move almost continuously from Monday morning in Asia to Friday evening in New York.
- Retail forex trading is subject to local regulations, which may limit the authorised providers, trading venues, currency pairs, and products available in each jurisdiction.
What Is Forex Trading?
Forex trading, short for foreign exchange trading, is the act of buying one currency while at the same time selling another, in the hope that the exchange rate between them moves in your favour. The word “forex” simply joins “foreign” and “exchange.”
Currencies are always traded in pairs because you are, in effect, taking a view on one currency relative to another. A trader buying EUR/USD is expressing the view that the euro may strengthen against the US dollar; if it does, the position can be closed at a better rate than it was opened.
The scale of this market is hard to overstate. Global foreign-exchange turnover averaged $9.6 trillion per day in April 2025—a 28% jump from $7.5 trillion three years earlier.1 The US dollar sits on one side of 89.2% of all trades, followed by the euro at 28.9% and the Japanese yen at 16.8%. No stock market comes close to that daily volume.
Unlike shares, forex has no single central exchange. It runs as an over-the-counter (OTC) market—a global network of banks, institutions, and brokers linked electronically across the major hubs of London, New York, Sydney, and Tokyo.
Because those hubs sit in different time zones, the market operates 24 hours a day, five days a week, opening in Asia on Monday morning and closing in New York on Friday evening. That continuous nature is why activity clusters around specific forex trading sessions when two hubs are open at once.
How the Forex Market Works: Currency Pairs and Key Terms
Before placing a single trade, it helps to understand the vocabulary that appears on every forex platform. These terms describe how a pair is quoted, how price movements are measured, and how much a position actually costs to hold.
Base and Quote Currency
In any pair, the first currency is the base and the second is the quote. The base currency is the one being bought or sold, and the quote currency shows how much of it is needed to buy one unit of the base. For EUR/USD at 1.08, one Euro is worth 1.08 US dollars—the Euro is the base and the dollar is the quote.

Image 1: Example of base and quote currency
Currency Pair Categories
Currency pairs fall into three broad groups by liquidity and popularity. Majors involve the US dollar against another leading currency and account for the bulk of daily volume; minors, or crosses, leave the dollar out; and exotics pair a major currency with one from a smaller or emerging economy.
| Category | Description | Examples |
| Majors | Most heavily traded; always include the US dollar | EUR/USD, USD/JPY, GBP/USD |
| Minors (crosses) | Actively traded pairs that exclude the US dollar | EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY |
| Exotics | A major currency paired with an emerging-market currency; usually wider spreads | USD/INR, USD/ZAR, USD/TRY |
Table 1: The Three Main Categories of Currency Pairs
Majors tend to carry the tightest spreads because they trade in such high volume, while exotic pairs move less predictably and usually cost more to trade. It is worth getting familiar with the most traded currency pairs before deciding what to follow.
Pips and Spreads
A pip is the smallest standard unit of price movement in a currency pair. For most pairs it is the fourth decimal place (0.0001), while for pairs quoted against the Japanese yen it is the second decimal place (0.01). If EUR/USD moves from 1.1050 to 1.1051, that is a one-pip move.
The spread is the difference between the bid (sell) price and the ask (buy) price of a pair—in effect, the cost of entering a trade. If EUR/USD shows a bid of 1.1050 and an ask of 1.1051, the spread is one pip. Tighter spreads generally mean lower trading costs, which is why heavily traded majors are usually cheaper to trade than exotics. A fuller explanation of how the spread works is available separately.

Image 2: Example of pips and spreads
Lot Sizes and Pip Value
Forex is traded in standardised quantities called lots. A standard lot is 100,000 units of the base currency, a mini lot is 10,000 units, and a micro lot is 1,000 units.
Lot size sets how much each pip is worth: on a standard lot of EUR/USD one pip is worth about $10, on a mini lot about $1, and on a micro lot about $0.10. Getting comfortable with lot sizing and pip value is one of the first practical steps for a new trader, because it defines how much a single price move gains or costs.

Image 3: Example of lot sizes and pip value
Leverage and Margin
Leverage lets a trader control a large position with a relatively small deposit, called margin. At 30:1 leverage, for example, a trader can open a $30,000 position by putting up $1,000 of margin. This is what makes short-term currency trading accessible without large amounts of capital.
Leverage cuts both ways, though. It magnifies gains and losses in equal measure—the same 30:1 ratio that could multiply a profit will multiply a loss just as fast, and a position may be closed automatically if margin runs too low.
Our guide to the mechanics of leverage covers this in more depth. Leverage is the single concept a beginner most needs to respect, because misusing it is one of the most common ways new traders lose money quickly.
How Forex Trades Can Result in Gains or Losses—and the Risks Involved
A forex trade can go in one of two directions. Going long means buying a pair because you expect the base currency to strengthen against the quote; going short means selling a pair because you expect the base to weaken.
Because currencies are always quoted in pairs, there is no structural barrier to selling first—you gain if the pair falls, and lose if it rises.
Consider a simple illustration. Suppose a trader goes long one mini lot of EUR/USD at 1.1000 and the pair rises 50 pips to 1.1050. At roughly $1 per pip on a mini lot, that is about a $50 gain before costs. Had the pair instead fallen 50 pips, the trader would have faced a loss of a similar size.
This example is hypothetical and for illustrative purposes only. It does not reflect actual trading results or client experiences.
The risks are real and worth stating plainly. Exchange rates can move sharply on economic data, central-bank decisions, or geopolitical events, sometimes gapping straight through the level where a trader hoped to exit. Leverage amplifies those moves against an account as readily as it works in the account’s favour. No strategy removes this risk, and losses are always possible—which is why position sizing and risk management tend to matter far more to long-term outcomes than picking any single “right” trade.
How Retail Traders Access the Forex Market
The interbank market where trillions change hands each day is not directly open to individuals. Retail traders reach currency price movements through one of three main routes, and the distinction matters both for cost and for what is legally available in a given country.
- Spot forex: Buying or selling a currency pair for near-immediate settlement at the current market rate. This is the classic form of forex trading offered by many international brokers, though it is not the route available to retail traders in every jurisdiction.
- Exchange-traded currency derivatives: Futures and options on currency pairs that are traded on regulated exchanges rather than over the counter. Their availability and the requirements for retail participation vary by jurisdiction.
- Contracts for Difference (CFDs): CFD is an agreement to exchange the difference in a currency pair’s price between opening and closing a position, without owning the underlying currency. Forex CFDs let traders speculate on price movements in either direction using leverage.
With forex CFDs, the broker’s main cost is usually built into the spread, sometimes alongside a small commission. Some CFD brokers, including Vantage, offer account types where trading costs may be reflected through raw spreads plus commission, while other account types incorporate costs primarily into the spread. Pricing varies by account type and market conditions.
Whichever the model, leverage on CFDs magnifies both gains and losses, and availability of CFD products varies by jurisdiction and may be subject to local regulation. A broader overview of how CFD trading works is available in a separate guide.
Forex Trading Rules and Regulatory Considerations
Forex trading is legal in many jurisdictions, but the rules and available products vary by country. The applicable framework may depend on where the trader resides, which broker or legal entity provides the service, the type of forex product being traded, and whether the platform is authorised to operate in that jurisdiction.
Financial authorities may regulate areas such as broker licensing, market conduct, client protection, leverage, risk disclosures, and permitted products. Depending on local rules, retail traders may be able to access spot forex, forex Contracts for Difference (CFDs), exchange-listed currency futures or options, or other approved instruments. Some jurisdictions may also restrict offshore platforms, certain currency pairs, leverage levels, or cross-border payment methods.
Before opening an account, traders should review the broker’s legal entity and regulatory status, confirm whether it is authorised to serve residents of their country, and check whether the relevant products and payment methods are permitted under local rules. The availability of a platform online does not necessarily mean that it is authorised in every jurisdiction.
Regulations and product availability can change over time. Traders should therefore consult the relevant financial regulator or seek independent professional advice for the latest requirements that apply to their circumstances.
This information is provided for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. Vantage’s products and services may not be available in every jurisdiction. For further information, read our dedicated guide on whether forex trading is legal.
Forex vs Stocks: Key Differences
Many new traders come to forex after some exposure to shares, so it helps to see how the two differ. The table below summarises the main contrasts.
| Feature | Forex | Stocks |
| Market structure | Decentralised OTC market with no central exchange | Traded on centralised exchanges such as the NSE or NYSE |
| Trading hours | 24 hours a day, five days a week | Limited to exchange hours |
| What is traded | Currency pairs | Shares in individual companies |
| Typical leverage | Often higher, magnifying gains and losses | Usually lower for retail investors |
| Main price drivers | Interest rates, economic data, geopolitics | Company earnings, sector trends, broad market |
Table 2: Forex Trading Compared With Stock Trading
Neither market is inherently safer than the other; they simply behave differently and carry different risks.
Forex’s around-the-clock access and higher typical leverage can suit active short-term traders, though the same features demand tighter risk control. For anyone weighing the two, a closer look at how CFDs on shares differ from owning stock adds useful context.

Image 4: How Forex Trading Compares With Stock Trading
What This Means for Forex Traders
Forex trading involves taking a view on the relative value of two currencies. While the underlying concept is straightforward, the market can move quickly and is influenced by economic developments, market volatility, leverage, and regulatory requirements.
Understanding currency pairs, pips, spreads, and margin provides a foundation for learning how forex trading works. It is equally important to understand the risks involved and the rules that apply in the trader’s jurisdiction.
New traders should familiarise themselves with the market, the products available, and the potential for losses before placing a trade. Access to a trading platform does not remove the need to assess the risks or confirm whether the service is permitted in their location.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
What is forex trading and how does it work?
Forex trading is the buying and selling of currency pairs to profit from changes in their exchange rate. A trader may buy a currency pair if they expect the base currency to strengthen against the quote currency, or sell the pair if they expect the opposite. Trades happen through a broker rather than a single central exchange, and prices move continuously throughout the global trading week.
What is a pip in forex trading?
What is leverage in forex trading?
Leverage allows a trader to control a larger position with a smaller deposit, known as margin. For example, 30:1 leverage means $1,000 of margin can control a $30,000 position. It magnifies both profits and losses, so higher leverage increases risk as much as potential reward.
Is forex trading legal?
Forex trading is legal in many jurisdictions, but the applicable rules, permitted products, and platform requirements vary by location. Traders should confirm that their chosen provider is authorised to offer services in their jurisdiction and review the latest guidance from the relevant financial regulator before trading.
How much money do you need to start forex trading?
There is no single required amount, and it varies widely by broker and account type. Because forex is traded in lots and often uses leverage, small deposits can control much larger positions, which also means losses can be large relative to the deposit. Only risk money you can afford to lose, and treat any minimum-deposit figure as a starting point rather than a recommended amount.
Is forex trading risky?
Yes. All trading carries risk, and forex is no exception—exchange rates can move sharply and leverage magnifies losses as well as gains. Many retail traders lose money, particularly when they use high leverage without a risk-management plan. Understanding the market and using tools such as position sizing matters before trading with real funds.
RISK WARNING: CFDs are complex financial instruments and carry a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. You should ensure you fully understand the risks involved and carefully consider whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money before trading.
Disclaimer: The information is provided for educational purposes only and doesn’t take into account your personal objectives, financial circumstances, or needs. It does not constitute investment advice. We encourage you to seek independent advice if necessary. The information has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research. No representation or warranty is given as to the accuracy or completeness of any information contained within. This material may contain historical or past performance figures and should not be relied on. Furthermore estimates, forward-looking statements, and forecasts cannot be guaranteed. The information on this site and the products and services offered are not intended for distribution to any person in any country or jurisdiction where such distribution or use would be contrary to local law or regulation.
References
1. “OTC foreign exchange turnover in April 2025 – Bank for International Settlements” https://www.bis.org/statistics/rpfx25_fx.htm Accessed 2 July 2026


