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What Is a Forex Broker?

Updated: Sep 17, 2022

What Is a Forex Broker?

What Is a Forex Broker?

A forex broker is a financial services company that provides traders access to a platform for buying and selling foreign currencies.


Forex is short for foreign exchange. Transactions in the forex market are always between a pair of two different currencies.


A forex broker may also known be as a retail forex broker or a currency trading broker.



The Role of a Forex Broker


Most foreign exchange transactions are between pairs of the currencies of the 10 nations that make up the G10. The nations and their currencies include the U.S. dollar (USD), the Euro (EUR), the pound sterling (GBP), the Japanese yen (JPY), the Australian dollar (AUD), the New Zealand dollar (NZD), the Canadian dollar (CAD), and the Swiss franc (CHF).


Most brokers allow customers to trade in other currencies, including those of emerging markets.


Using a forex broker, a trader opens a trade by buying a currency pair and closes the trade by selling the same pair. For example, a trader who wants to exchange euros for U.S. dollars buys the EUR/USD pair. This amounts to buying euros using U.S. dollars.


To close the trade, the trader sells the pair, which is equivalent to buying U.S. dollars with euros.


If the exchange rate is higher when the trader closes the trade, the trader makes a profit. If not, the trader takes a loss.



Opening a Forex Account


Opening a forex trading account these days is quite simple and can be done online. Before trading, the forex broker will require a customer to deposit money into the new version as collateral.


Brokers also provide leverage to customers so they can trade larger amounts than they have on deposit. Depending on the country the trader is trading from, that leverage can be 30 to 400 times the amount available in the trading account.


High leverage makes forex trading risky, and most traders lose money attempting it.


How Forex Brokers Make Money


Forex brokers are compensated in two ways. The first is through the bid-ask spread of a currency pair.


For example, when the Euro-U.S. Dollar pair is priced as 1.20010 bid and 1.20022 ask, the spread between these two prices is .00012, known as 1.2 pips. When a retail client opens a position at the asking price and later closes it at the bid price, the forex broker will collect that spread amount.


Secondly, some brokers charge additional fees. Some charge a fee per transaction or a monthly fee for access to a particular software interface or fees for access to unique trading products such as exotic options.


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