Key Forex Trading Terms for FxPro Users
Understand core forex trading terms, order types and risk concepts used on FxPro so South African traders can interpret prices and manage positions.
Essential Forex Terms for FxPro Traders in South Africa
Forex trading platforms, including FxPro, rely on a fixed set of technical terms that describe prices, order handling and risk. A South African trader typically starts with currency pairs, where the first currency is the base and the second is the quote; the price shows how much of the quote is needed to buy one unit of the base. Bid is the highest price currently available to sell the pair into, and ask is the lowest price to buy from; the spread is simply ask minus bid and reflects a basic trading cost. Price movements are usually measured in pips, a small fixed step in price that is used to calculate profit, loss and distance to stop-loss or take-profit levels. Leverage, expressed as a ratio such as 1:30 or 1:100, lets a trader control a position larger than the account balance, which increases both potential gain and potential loss. Margin is the portion of account funds set aside to keep a leveraged position open, so if equity drops too far versus required margin a margin call or position closure can follow. Positions can be long (buying a pair in expectation of a rise) or short (selling in expectation of a fall), and they are sized in lots, with standard, mini and micro lot definitions describing how many units of the base currency are traded. Understanding how these terms work together helps a South African client read the FxPro price feed, place suitable orders and manage exposure across different sessions.
Core Forex Trading Terminology
Currency pairs are the basic instrument in forex. Each pair combines a base currency and a quote currency, for example EUR/USD or USD/JPY, and the platform shows a live exchange rate between them. Major pairs use currencies that trade heavily worldwide, while minor and exotic pairs include less frequently traded currencies.
The bid price is the level at which the platform is ready to buy the base currency from the trader, and the ask price is the level at which it is ready to sell the base currency. The difference between these two is the spread, which forms part of the cost of each trade that opens or closes at the current market price.
A pip, short for "percentage in point", is a standardised unit of price movement. For most currency pairs a pip is located at the fourth decimal place, while for pairs involving the Japanese yen it is usually at the second decimal place. Pip values are central for measuring how far price has moved and for expressing target or stop distances.
Leverage allows a trader to open a position that is larger than the cash balance in the account by using borrowed funds from the broker. Ratios such as 1:30 or 1:100 show how many times the account equity can be effectively multiplied, but the underlying principle is that gains and losses are both magnified in the same proportion.
Order Types and Execution Terms
Market orders instruct the platform to execute immediately at the best available current price, prioritising speed of execution over exact price control. Limit orders define a maximum buy price or minimum sell price; they trigger only if the market reaches that specified level or better.
Stop-loss orders are protection tools that close an open position once price moves against the trader by a set amount, helping to restrict the size of a loss. Take-profit orders close a trade when a specified profit level has been reached, locking in gains without the need for constant monitoring.
Pending orders include several specialised forms:
- Buy stop: opens a buy position if price rises to a chosen level.
- Sell stop: opens a sell position if price falls to a chosen level.
- Buy limit: opens a buy position if price falls to a lower, predefined level.
- Sell limit: opens a sell position if price rises to a higher, predefined level.
These instructions are stored on the trading server and are activated automatically when market prices meet the specified conditions.
Position, Margin and Lot Size
A long position is created by buying a currency pair with the expectation that its price will increase, so profit arises from selling later at a higher price. A short position is the reverse: it involves selling a pair first, aiming to buy it back later at a lower price if the market declines.
Margin is the capital locked by the platform as collateral for a leveraged trade. Used margin is the sum allocated to all open positions, while free margin is the amount still available to support new trades or absorb losses. If account equity falls too close to the required margin level, the trader may encounter a margin call or automatic position closure to prevent the balance from turning negative.
Lot size defines how many units of the base currency are traded per position. A standard lot typically represents 100,000 units of the base currency, a mini lot represents 10,000 units, and a micro lot represents 1,000 units. Choosing a smaller or larger lot size directly adjusts the monetary value of each pip.
| Term | Plain-English meaning |
|---|---|
| Long position | Buy first, profit if the pair's price rises |
| Short position | Sell first, profit if the pair's price falls |
| Margin | Funds held as collateral for open leveraged positions |
| Free margin | Spare funds available to open new trades or absorb losses |
| Lot | Fixed trade volume measured in units of the base currency |
Market Analysis, Volatility and Sessions
Technical analysis focuses on price charts and indicators to anticipate future price moves. Support levels are price zones where buying interest has historically limited further declines, while resistance levels are zones where selling activity has previously capped upward moves.
Fundamental analysis instead examines macroeconomic data and policy factors. Indicators such as interest rate decisions, GDP figures, inflation measures and employment statistics can shift expectations about a currency's value.
Volatility describes how widely and how fast prices move within a given time period. High volatility means larger swings between highs and lows, which may offer higher potential returns but also leads to faster and potentially larger drawdowns if market moves are unfavorable.
Forex trading operates around the clock during weekdays through several global sessions: Sydney, Tokyo, London and New York. Session overlaps, particularly when London and New York are open at the same time, often feature higher liquidity and more active price movement. South African traders need to align these session times with South Africa Standard Time when planning trading routines.
Risk Management Terminology
Risk-reward ratio measures how much potential profit a trade offers compared with its expected loss. For instance, a 1:2 ratio means a trader is risking one unit of capital to target a possible gain of two units, based on predefined stop-loss and take-profit levels.
Drawdown refers to the percentage decline from the highest recorded account equity to a subsequent low point. Maximum drawdown over a period is used to understand how severe losses have been historically for a given approach or trading style.
Position sizing is the process of deciding how large each trade should be, taking into account total account size, individual trade risk and market conditions. Sound position sizing aims to ensure that no single outcome, even a loss at the stop-loss level, can damage the account to the point where recovery becomes difficult.