Money Market Bank Account
There are
two types of money market bank accounts; a mini money
market bank account and a regular money market bank
account. Trading with a mini account, offering all the
facilities of a regular money market bank account, is an
excellent way for small investors to learn about and take
part in money market trading.
Normally,
for most brokerages, a margin deposit of just $1,000 allows
you to control a $100,000 position in the money market.
That's a 100:1 leverage or 1% (note: some brokers also offer
leverages as high as 400:1). Said in a different way, a
‘regular full-sized money market bank account’, sometimes
referred to as a 100k money market bank account, allows you
to trade with lot sizes equal to $100,000. Each lot is worth
$100,000 in currency. So it would only require $1,000 to
trade one lot.
The great
features of a money market bank account are what make this
market the hottest market to trade in right now. The money
market broker has given you a loan of $99,000 dollars
secured only by your $1,000! This is a huge loan and, as you
may know by now, this is what allows traders to make
extraordinary incomes in this market. And, as you also are
probably used to hearing, “leverage is a two-edged sword”,
it is what can cause you to lose a lot of money if you trade
without rules or stop-loss orders.
Unlike
Futures (Commodity Trading), the market that most people
associate with High leverage, you can never have a debit
balance in your money market bank account when trading
foreign currency.
So, despite the greater leverage associated with money
market trading, it is still arguably less risky than futures
trading. Futures markets are often prone to sudden and
dramatic moves, against which you can't protect yourself,
even by trading with protective stops. Your position may be
liquidated at a loss, and you'll be liable for any resulting
deficit in the account. But because of the money market’s
great liquidity and 24-hour continuous trading, dangerous
trading gaps and limit moves are very improbable. Orders in
the money market bank account are executed quickly, without
slippage or partial fills, which is just great.
And as it was not enough, there are no margin-calls, for
your protection, the money market broker's trading platform
will automatically close out some or all of your open
positions if your money market bank account equity, meaning
the total floating value of the money market bank account,
falls below the level required to hold the positions. Think
of this as a final, automatic stop, always working on your
behalf to prevent a debit balance.
A mini
money market bank account, on the other hand, uses a
different leverage calculation than a regular (100k) money
market bank account. This means that instead of trading
full-size currency lots (100,000 units), you'll trade in
lots that are just 1/10 the size (10,000 currency units),
which in turn greatly reduces the amount of money you risk
in each trade you enter. Pips (one thousands of any currency
quote) in a mini money market bank account are worth, on
average, $1 instead of the $8 to $10 value they have in a
regular money market bank account. The mini money market
bank account sometimes offers up to a huge 200:1 leverage,
this means that just a $50 margin deposit will allow you to
trade lots worth roughly $10,000 , but the smaller lot
sizes, with correspondingly smaller pip values, means that
you'll be profiting less from a successful trade and also
losing less if the trade goes bad. For example, while a
20-pip loss on a 100,000 USD/JPY position would be $200, the
same loss on a 10,000 USD/JPY position in a mini money
market bank account would amount to only $20.
Great news
for the starting money market traders is that there is no
maximum trade volume when you use a mini money market bank
account. Although the standard trade size is 10,000 units,
you are not limited to trading one lot. For instance, you
can trade 10,000 units or even 200,000 units. Allowing that,
as you become more seasoned and build up your confidence you
can slowly increase the size of your positions to maximize
profits. This ability of the money market bank account to
customize the size of the trade will allow you to have a
better risk management of your money.
In addition
to the mini money market bank account and the regular
full-sized money market bank account, there is another type
of account known as a demo money market bank account.
Many online money market brokers offer a demo account which
is a simulation account that you can trade until you feel
comfortable trading your own funds. Demo money market bank
accounts behave just like real money market bank accounts,
the only difference being that the money you are trading is
not real and no actual trades are ever executed.
The purpose of using a demo money market bank account if you
are new to money market trading is to get you comfortable
making trades and to help you become familiar with the
brokers trading platform. You can cut your proverbial teeth
so to speak without risking any of your own funds. This
makes a demo money market bank account good for a brand new
trader who just wants to see how trading works. There are
some drawbacks however to using this type of money market
bank account to learn money market trading, as it follows.
The biggest downside to using a demo money market bank
account is that you will likely only be able to trade
standard size accounts with a demo account. If you intend to
trade with a mini money market bank account, as many
beginning money market traders do, a standard size demo
account is going to behave differently than a mini money
market bank account. Your margins are very different for a
standard account versus a mini account. If you become
accustomed to trading a standard size money market bank
account, your trading methodologies will show it. This is
because the larger margins offered on standard size money
market bank accounts allow you to take greater profits from
smaller movements in currency prices.
The other major downside to trading with a demo money market
bank account for learning foreign currency trading is that
as a trader, you need to carefully manage the emotional
aspects of trading real money. Since a demo money market
bank account utilises a simulated source of money,
detachment is easy to come by. Once you start trading your
actual funds, you might just find that your tolerance for
risk is much more conservative.
Once you
have read, studied, and completed any courses on money
market trading that you may be taking, you are ready for
probationary live trading. The single best way to trade the
money market is to just Do it. Now, this does not mean to
jump in and trade a full size money market bank account with
real money as this would be an enormous risk for a new
trader and not a very smart move indeed. What you can do is
to find a broker that offers a mini money market bank
account. Mini money market bank accounts usually start at
$200 and typically give you 100:1 leverage. That said, as of
this writing, there is one broker (Easy-Forex) that allows
you to trade a live mini money market bank account for as
little as $25.
Once you are comfortable trading your mini
money market bank account, you can always have it converted
to a regular money market bank account (with an additional
deposit) if you choose. Overall, it can’t be stressed
enough, the best way to learn money market trade is to have
experience with live hands on trading.
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