The foreign exchange market (Forex, FX, or currency market) is a global decentralized market for the trading of currencies.
The main participants in this market are the larger international
banks. Financial centers around the world function as anchors of trading
between a wide range of multiple types of buyers and sellers around the
clock, with the exception of weekends. The foreign exchange market
determines the relative values of different currencies.
The foreign exchange market works through financial institutions, and
it operates on several levels. Behind the scenes banks turn to a
smaller number of financial firms known as “dealers,” who are actively
involved in large quantities of foreign exchange trading. Most foreign
exchange dealers are banks, so this behind-the-scenes market is
sometimes called the “interbank market”, although a few insurance
companies and other kinds of financial firms are involved. Trades
between foreign exchange dealers can be very large, involving hundreds
of millions of dollars.
Because of the sovereignty issue when involving two currencies, Forex
has little (if any) supervisory entity regulating its actions.
The foreign exchange market assists
international trade and investments by enabling currency conversion. For
example, it permits a business in the United States to import goods
from the European Union member states, especially Eurozone members, and
pay euros, even though its income is in United States dollars. It also
supports direct speculation and evaluation relative to the value of
currencies, and the carry trade, speculation based on the interest rate
differential between two currencies.
In a typical foreign exchange
transaction, a party purchases some
quantity of one currency by paying for some quantity of another
currency. The modern foreign exchange market began forming during the
1970s after three decades of government restrictions on foreign exchange
transactions (the Bretton Woods system
of monetary management established the rules for commercial and
financial relations among the world's major industrial states after
World War II), when countries gradually switched to floating exchange
rates from the previous exchange rate regime, which remained fixed as
per the Bretton Woods wikipedia
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