
Fundamental Analysis in Forex Markets
How to Analyze Economic Data and Make Smarter Currency Trades
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Narrado por:
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Benjamin Neil Scott
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De:
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Lucas Ryan Walsh
Sobre este áudio
People don't often apply prudence while dealing with foreign currency, which is a complicated and ever-changing field. Instead, a changing mix of market psychology, geopolitical events, and economic data affects them. Inflation and interest rates are two of the most important factors that affect currency movements. These two things affect each other and are both important in figuring out how much a currency is worth. When you look at interest rates and inflation through the prism of fundamental analysis, they go from being abstract ideas to practical tools for navigating one of the world's most turbulent and liquid markets. For effective foreign currency trading, it's important to know how interest rates and inflation affect each other. Inflation is when the prices of products and services in a nation go up over time.
When inflation goes up, a currency's buying power goes down because it becomes harder to afford things. On the other hand, interest rates show how much you may make on your savings or how much it would cost to borrow money. The Federal Reserve System in the US and the European Central Bank in the Eurozone are two central banks that mostly affect the economy and inflation via their interest rate policies. Modern monetary policy puts a lot of weight on how these two things are connected.