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Learn How to Trade Forex with FX PowerCourse Learn How to Trade Forex with FX PowerCourse
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Learn How to Trade Forex with FX PowerCourse

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The FX Power Course is a complete course. You will learn how to identify trading opportunities, how to time the market, and when to take profits or close a trade. However, this is only part of what you will learn. The course teaches the art of risk management: how to maximize your gains and keep your losses to a minimum.

The FX Power Course is not a general trading course. The course is about currency trading. Every currency has a unique personality and should be traded differently. The course teaches which currencies to trade and how to trade them.

Learn How to Trade Forex with FX PowerCourse

You'll be able to learn -

  • To Read Charts: Read and Analyze charts using advanced technical tools
  • To Time The Market: Maximize profits by identifying key entry and exit points
  • To Identify Trends : Isolate trends to track and gauge their strength
  • To Understand Currency Pairs: Understand the unique behavior of each currency pair and the economic forces that drive currency movements
  • Real Strategies: Use time tested strategies and techniques taught by experienced traders

How It Works

  • One Lesson Per Day – There is a new lesson every day, except on Saturday and Sunday, for one month. You simply log-in to view the day's lesson.
  • Question and Answer Sessions – After each lesson you have the opportunity to post questions for the instructors or to discuss ideas with fellow students.
  • Assignments & Quizzes – Following most lessons, there is an assignment or a quiz. These assignments and quizzes are to help you learn and recall the lesson's material. Instructors will provide individualized feedback based on the assignments.
  • Trade Alongside a Professional – The FX Power Course provides an opportunity to practice trading and gain valuable insight on how to improve your trading.
  • Study at your own time- There are instructors available 24 hours a day, 5 days a week. You don't have to change your life to take the FX Power Course. As long as you have 45 minutes to an hour a day of free time, you can fit the FX Power Course into your schedule, without sacrificing the benefits of a classroom environment and personal instruction.

To Order, CLICK HERE.



The foreign exchange market is the generic term for the worldwide institutions that exist to exchange or trade currencies. Foreign exchange is often referred to as "forex" or "FX." The foreign exchange market is an 'over the counter' (OTC) market, that means that there is no central exchange and clearing house where orders are matched. FX dealers and market makers around the world are linked to each other around-the-clock via telephone, computer, and fax, creating one cohesive market. Since there is no centralized exchange, competition between market makers prohibits monopolistic pricing strategies. If one market maker attempts to drastically skew the price, then traders simply have the option to find another market maker. Moreover, spreads are closely watched to ensure market makers are not whimsically altering the cost of the trade. Many equity markets, on the other hand, operate in a completely different fashion; the New York Stock Exchange, for instance, is the sole place where companies listed on the NYSE can have their stocks traded. Centralized markets are operated by what are referred to as specialists; market makers, on the other hand, is the term used in reference to decentralized marketplaces. Since the NYSE is a centralized market, a stock traded on the NYSE can only have 1 bid-ask quote at all times. Decentralized markets, such as foreign exchange, can have multiple market makers - all of whom have the right to quote different prices.

Centralized Market
By their very nature, centralized markets tend to be monopolistic: with a single specialist controlling the market, prices can easily be skewed to accommodate the interests of the specialist, not those of the traders. If, for example, the market is filled with sellers from whom the specialists must buy from but no prospective buyers on the other side, the specialist will be forced to buy from the sellers in be in a situation where they cannot sell a commodity that is being sold off and hence falling in value. In such a situation, the specialist may simply widen the spread, thereby increasing the cost of the trade and preventing additional participants from entering the market. Or, specialists can simply drastically alter the quotes they are offering, thus manipulating the price to accommodate their own needs. More...


Learn How to Trade Forex with FX PowerCourse


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