Leverage ki limit
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  • #16 Collapse

    bhai mjhe abi tk ye smjh ni a rhi k ye leaverage kiya hoti hai, aur insta me is ka kiya aqsad hai?????????????????? qk aur doosre forum me iska istemaal ni hai
     
    • <a href="https://www.instaforex.org/ru/?x=ruforum">InstaForex</a>
    • #17 Collapse

      ene b insta k account e is ki value 1:1000 hi rkhi hai lekn mjhe is ki bilkul smjh ni hai k ye kiya cheez haii?????????????????????????????
       
      • #18 Collapse

        bhai ap insta forex ki site par ja kar apney account se leverage ko manage kar saktey hain aur leverage apka jitna zyada hoga utna fayda dega leqin nuqsan bhi wesey hi ho sakta hai tu ap apney hisab se set karen leverage ko.
        • #19 Collapse

          Brother Waisay Mujhe maloom nahin Thaa k Bonus Account par leverage change ki jaa Sakti hai yaa nahin laikin Sab log Keh Rahay hain Tou yakeenaan Aisaa ho Gaa,waisay Standard leverage best rehti hai aap k pas apnaa capital bhi Tou hotaa hai tou Zyadaa leverage Ki kya Zaroorat
          Mind Is like A Parachute - It Is Useful only IF Open
          • #20 Collapse

             
            • #21 Collapse

              the world leading to high liquidity;
              its geographical dispersion;
              its continuous operation: 24 hours a day except weekends, i.e., trading from 22:00 GMT on Sunday (Sydney) until 22:00 GMT Friday (New York);
              the variety of factors that affect exchange rates;
              the low margins of relative profit compared with other markets of fixed income; and
              the use of leverage to enhance profit and loss margins and with respect to account size.
              As such, it has been referred to as the market closest to the ideal of perfect competition, notwithstanding currency intervention by central banks.

              According to the Bank for International Settlements,[3] the preliminary global results from the 2013 Triennial Central Bank Survey of Foreign Exchange and OTC Derivatives Markets Activity show that trading in foreign exchange markets averaged $5.3 trillion per day in April 2013. This is up from $4.0 trillion in April 2010 and $3.3 trillion in April 2007. Foreign exchange swaps were the most actively traded instruments in April 2013, at $2.2 trillion per day, followed by spot trading at $2.0 trillion.
                 
              • #22 Collapse

                According to the Bank for International Settlements,[4] as of April 2010, average daily turnover in global foreign exchange markets is estimated at $3.98 trillion, a growth of approximately 20% over the $3.21 trillion daily volume as of April 2007. Some firms specializing on foreign exchange market had put the average daily turnover in excess of US$4 trillion.[5]

                The $3.98 trillion break-down is as follows:

                $1.490 trillion in spot transactions
                $475 billion in outright forwards
                $1.765 trillion in foreign exchange swaps
                $43 billion currency swaps
                $207 billion in options and other pro
                   
                • #23 Collapse

                  ducts
                  Contents [hide]
                  1 History
                  1.1 Ancient
                  1.2 Medieval and later
                  1.3 Early modern
                  1.4 Modern to post-modern
                  1.4.1 After WWII
                  1.4.2 Markets close
                  1.4.3 After 1973
                  2 Market size and liquidity
                  3 Market participants
                     
                  • #24 Collapse

                    3.1 Commercial companies
                    3.2 Central banks
                    3.3 Foreign exchange fixing
                    3.4 Hedge funds as speculators
                    3.5 Investment management firms
                    3.6 Retail foreign exchange traders
                    3.7 Non-bank foreign exchange companies
                    3.8 Money transfer/remittance companies and bureaux de change
                    4 Trading characteristic
                       
                    • #25 Collapse

                      s
                      5 Determinants of exchange rates
                      5.1 Economic factors
                      5.2 Political conditions
                      5.3 Market psychology
                      6 Financial instruments
                      6.1 Spot
                      6.2 Forward
                      6.3 Swap
                      6.4 Future
                      6.5 Option
                         
                      • #26 Collapse

                        7 Speculation
                        8 Risk aversion
                        9 Carry trade
                        10 Forex signals
                        11 See also
                        12 References
                        13 External links
                        History[edit]
                        Ancient[edit]
                        Currency trading and exchange first occurred in ancient times.[6] Money-changing people, people helping others to change money and also taking a commission or charging a fee were living in the times of the Talmudic writings (Biblical times). These people (sometimes called "kollybist?s") used city-stalls, at feast times the temples Court of the Gentiles instead.[7] Money-changers were also in more recent ancient times silver-smiths and/or gold-smiths.[8]

                        During the fourth century, the Byzantium government kept a monopoly on the exchange of currency.[9]
                           
                        • #27 Collapse

                             
                          • #28 Collapse

                            Prior to the first world war there was a much more limited control of international trade. Motivated by the outset of war countries abandoned the gold standard monetary system.[23]

                            Modern to post-modern[edit]
                            From 1899 to 1913, holdings of countries' foreign exchange increased at an annual rate of 10.8%, while holdings of gold increased at
                               
                            • #29 Collapse

                              n annual rate of 6.3% between 1903 and 1913.[24]

                              At the time of the closing of the year 1913, nearly half of the world's foreign exchange was conducted using the Pound sterling.[25] The number of foreign banks operating within the boundaries of London increased in the years from 1860 to 1913 from 3 to 71. In 1902 there were altogether two London foreign exchange brokers.[26] In the earliest years of the twentieth century trade was most active in Paris, New York and Berlin, while Britain remained largely uninvolved in trade until 1914. Between 1919 and 1922 the employment of foreign exchange brokers within London increased to 17, in 1924 there were 40 firms operating for the purposes of exchange.[27] During the 1920s the occurrence of trade in London resembled more the modern manifestation, by 1928 forex trade was integral to the financial functioning of the city. Continental exchange controls, plus other factors, in Europe and Latin America, hampered any attempt at wholesale prosperity from trade for those of 1930's London.[28]

                              During the 1920s, the Kleinwort family were known to be the leaders of the foreign exchange market; while Japheth, Montagu & Co., and Seligman still warrant recognition as significant FX traders.[29]
                                 
                              • <a href="https://www.instaforex.org/ru/?x=ruforum">InstaForex</a>
                              • #30 Collapse

                                sir acctually ap k bonuess se he ap ka accouint ki leverege kam ya zyada hoti he ,,,jb ap trading kr rahy hoty han to less leverge se cheezayn buy and cell kryn is ka mtlab ye he k kamm bonuss se trdiing kryn,,,,,,,,,,,,

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