History of Forex Trading

Share

Many centuries ago, the value of commodities was expressed in terms of other goods. This type of economics was grounded on the barter system among individuals. The obvious limitations of such an economic system spurred people to invent more generally accepted mediums of exchange. It was essential to estimate something as a common base of value. In some economies, different goods served for such purpose-mainly agricultural goods like cattle, furs and grain. Gradually, some precious metals, in particular gold and silver, established themselves as an accepted means of payment as well as a trustworthy storage of value.

Coins were originally minted from different precious and semi-precious metals: bronze, gold, copper, silver, etc. During the Middle Ages paper money were introduced in Europe and also gained acceptance. The precursors of contemporary’s modern currencies were the promissory notes, informal documents acknowledging monetary obligations. In 1696, Bank of Scotland became the first commercial bank in Europe to successfully issue paper money.

Prior to the World War One, most currencies were pegged to gold, which ensured their convertibility. It was possible to exchange freely paper money for gold.

Moreover, it was not necessary a Centrals bank to have full gold coverage of the state’s currency reserves. However, when a group mindset fostered the disastrous idea of converting back to gold on a mass scale, such panics led to the one referred to as “Run on banks.” The mixture of a greater supply of paper money without enough gold as coverage resulted inevitably in devastating inflation picks and political instability.

In July 1944, the Bretton Woods agreement was reached on the initiative of the United States of America. The conference rejected the proposal of John Maynard Keynes for a new world reserve currency in favor of a system built on the US Dollar. International institutions as the IBRD (now the World Bank), the International Monetary Fund and GATT were created in the same period as the emerging victors of WWII looked for a decision to avoid the destabilizing monetary crises and rebuilding their post-war economies. The Bretton Woods agreement imposed a system of fixed exchange rates based on the Gold Standard partly, fixing the USD at $35.00 per one ounce of gold and fixing the other currencies to the dollar, initially planned to be on a constant basis.

During the 1960’s, the Bretton Woods system came under pressure as national economies moved in different directions. A number of reorganizations kept the system viable for an enduring period but finally Bretton Woods system collapsed in the early 1970’s, following President Nixon’s unilateral suspension of the gold convertibility in August 1971. The dollar lost its convertibility to gold and came under constant pressure from the increasing US budgetary and trade deficits.

In 1979, the European Economic Community introduced a new fixed exchange rate system, named the European Monetary System. The EU pursuit for currency stability led to the Maastricht Treaty; its aim was not only to fix exchange rates but also to replace many of the member counties currencies with one single currency- the Euro. Up to the present, Europe has introduced the Euro in seventeen member countries. The physical initiation of the Euro took place on January 1, 2002.

In the last few decades the restrictions on capital inflows and outflows have been removed in most countries, leaving the market forces to adjust Forex exchange rates according to their perceived exchange values.

While producers had to struggle with the increased currency exchange volatility, the investors and financial institutions have discovered a new playground. The size of the Forex market now goes beyond any other investment market. The currency rates volatility led to development of numerous hedging strategies and increase of derivatives utilization.

The onset of electronic trade in the 1980s accelerated the deals and facilitated cross-border capital movements through Asian, European and American time zones. Foreign currency transactions increased intensively from nearly $70 billion a day in the 1980s to more than US$4 trillion a day three decades later, thus forming the most liquid global market.

 

Tags: 

About Nelly Naneva, LL.M, MBF

Nelly Naneva works as CEO of the Financial Institution Freetrade JSC and as Editor of Markets Weekly. She holds Masters' Degrees in Law and in Banking and Finance from Institute of Financial Services, School of Finance, London, Great Britain. She is an Expert author at EzineArticles and SelfGrowth, and among the 500 most-read authors for September 2012 on Yahoo.
Subscribe to Comments RSS Feed in this post

14 Responses

  1. My brother recommended I might like this web site. He was totally right. This post actually made my day. You can not imagine just how much time I had spent for this information! Thanks!

  2. Some really fantastic blog posts on this web site , thanks for contribution.

  3. Magnificent website. Lots of useful info here. I¡¦m sending it to several buddies ans additionally sharing in delicious. And certainly, thanks for your effort!

  4. Many thanks for finding the time to describe the terminlogy to the inexperienced persons!

  5. Hey! Would you mind if I share your blog with my zynga group? There’s a lot of people that I think would really enjoy your content. Please let me know. Cheers

  6. I regard something really interesting about your website so I saved to bookmarks .

  7. Good day! Do you use Twitter? I’d like to follow you if that would be okay. I’m definitely enjoying your blog and look forward to new posts.

  8. Hey all, You’ve done a fantastic job. I will certainly digg this and personally recommend to my friends. I am confident they’ll be took advantage of this website.

  9. Sweet web site, super design and style, really clean and utilize friendly.

  10. I truly enjoy looking through on this web site , it holds great articles .

  11. I always was interested in this topic and still am, thank you for posting.

  12. Very interesting information!Perfect just what I was looking for!

  13. Saved, I really like your site! :)

  14. Seriously like the fresh look. I enjoyed this article. Thank you for your quality blog post.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*
*