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Understanding Currency Pairs

Learn about major, minor, and exotic currency pairs

⏱️ 7 min min read

Understanding Currency Pairs

In forex trading, you never buy or sell a single currency. You always trade currency pairs—buying one currency while simultaneously selling another.

Currency Pair Structure

Base and Quote Currency

Every currency pair has two components:

EUR/USD = 1.0850

  • EUR (Base Currency) - The currency you're buying or selling
  • USD (Quote Currency) - The currency you're using to make the transaction
  • 1.0850 (Exchange Rate) - How much of the quote currency you need to buy one unit of the base currency

Reading it: "1 Euro costs 1.0850 US Dollars"

Long vs Short

Going Long (Buying):

  • You buy the base currency
  • You sell the quote currency
  • You profit if the pair rises

Example: Buy EUR/USD at 1.0850

  • If it rises to 1.0900, you profit 50 pips
  • You were betting EUR would strengthen vs USD

Going Short (Selling):

  • You sell the base currency
  • You buy the quote currency
  • You profit if the pair falls

Example: Sell GBP/USD at 1.2500

  • If it falls to 1.2450, you profit 50 pips
  • You were betting GBP would weaken vs USD

Types of Currency Pairs

1. Major Pairs

The most liquid and widely traded pairs, all involving the US Dollar.

Pair Name Characteristics
EUR/USD Euro Dollar Highest volume, tightest spreads
GBP/USD Cable Volatile, good for day trading
USD/JPY Dollar Yen Safe haven flows, Asian session
USD/CHF Dollar Swissy Inverse of EUR/USD, low volatility
AUD/USD Aussie Commodity currency, risk-on/off
USD/CAD Loonie Oil correlation, North America
NZD/USD Kiwi Similar to AUD, smaller volume

Advantages:

  • ✅ Tightest spreads (0.5-2 pips)
  • ✅ Highest liquidity
  • ✅ Most analysis available
  • ✅ Best for beginners

2. Minor Pairs (Cross Pairs)

Currency pairs that don't include the USD.

Popular Crosses:

EUR Crosses:

  • EUR/GBP - Euro vs Pound
  • EUR/JPY - Euro vs Yen
  • EUR/CHF - Euro vs Swiss Franc
  • EUR/AUD - Euro vs Aussie

GBP Crosses:

  • GBP/JPY - Pound vs Yen (very volatile!)
  • GBP/CHF - Pound vs Swiss Franc
  • GBP/AUD - Pound vs Aussie

JPY Crosses:

  • AUD/JPY - Risk-on/off indicator
  • NZD/JPY - High yield vs safe haven
  • CAD/JPY - Oil vs Yen

Characteristics:

  • Wider spreads (2-5 pips)
  • Less liquidity than majors
  • Can offer unique opportunities
  • Good for diversification

3. Exotic Pairs

Pairs involving emerging market currencies.

Examples:

  • USD/TRY (Turkish Lira) - High volatility, high spreads
  • USD/ZAR (South African Rand) - Commodity-linked
  • USD/MXN (Mexican Peso) - Latin America exposure
  • EUR/TRY (Euro/Turkish Lira) - European-EM cross

Characteristics:

  • ⚠️ Very wide spreads (10-50 pips)
  • ⚠️ Low liquidity
  • ⚠️ High volatility
  • ⚠️ Political risk
  • For experienced traders only

Pair Correlations

Some pairs move together (positive correlation) or opposite (negative correlation).

Positive Correlations

EUR/USD and GBP/USD (+0.85)

  • Both move similarly
  • When EUR/USD rises, GBP/USD usually rises
  • Trading both = increased exposure (not diversification!)

AUD/USD and NZD/USD (+0.90)

  • Both are commodity currencies
  • Highly correlated
  • Avoid trading both simultaneously

Negative Correlations

EUR/USD and USD/CHF (-0.95)

  • Almost perfectly inverse
  • When EUR/USD rises, USD/CHF falls
  • Use for hedging strategies

USD/JPY and Gold (-0.70)

  • Inverse relationship
  • Rising USD/JPY = Falling Gold
  • Risk-on vs risk-off indicator

Why Correlation Matters

Risk Management:

  • Trading EUR/USD long + GBP/USD long = 2x exposure to USD weakness
  • Diversify with uncorrelated pairs instead

Hedging:

  • Long EUR/USD + Long USD/CHF = partially hedged position

Confirmation:

  • If EUR/USD breaks out but GBP/USD doesn't follow, the breakout might be false

Choosing Pairs to Trade

For Beginners

Start with these 3:

  1. EUR/USD - Most liquid, tightest spread, predictable
  2. GBP/USD - Volatile but liquid, good range moves
  3. USD/JPY - Safe haven dynamics, Asian session liquidity

Why these?

  • Abundant analysis and education
  • Low trading costs
  • High liquidity (easy in/out)

For Intermediate Traders

Add these crosses:

  1. EUR/JPY - Combines EUR and JPY trends
  2. AUD/JPY - Risk sentiment indicator
  3. GBP/JPY - High volatility for scalpers

For Advanced Traders

Explore divergence plays:

  • Trade correlated pairs when correlation breaks
  • Example: EUR/USD up but USD/CHF not moving = opportunity

Trading Sessions and Pairs

Different pairs are most active during specific sessions.

London Session (8 AM - 5 PM GMT)

Most Active:

  • EUR/USD (highest volume)
  • GBP/USD (London is GBP home)
  • EUR/GBP
  • EUR/CHF

Why: London handles ~40% of global forex volume

New York Session (1 PM - 10 PM GMT)

Most Active:

  • EUR/USD (peaks when NY + London overlap)
  • GBP/USD
  • USD/CAD (North American pair)
  • USD/JPY

Why: Overlap with London creates highest liquidity

Asian Session (12 AM - 9 AM GMT)

Most Active:

  • USD/JPY (Tokyo is JPY home)
  • AUD/USD (Sydney market)
  • NZD/USD
  • AUD/JPY

Why: Lower volume, good for range trading

Pair Nicknames (Trader Slang)

Traders use nicknames for common pairs:

  • Cable - GBP/USD (transatlantic cable for quotes)
  • Fiber - EUR/USD (fiber optic cables)
  • Loonie - USD/CAD (Canadian loon on $1 coin)
  • Aussie - AUD/USD
  • Kiwi - NZD/USD
  • Swissy - USD/CHF
  • Gopher - USD/JPY (old slang, less common now)
  • Chunnel - EUR/GBP (Channel Tunnel)
  • Guppy - GBP/JPY (combination of "pound" and "yen")

Practical Trading Tips

1. Spread Awareness

Example: EUR/USD spread = 0.8 pips

  • You buy at 1.0851 (ask)
  • Immediately worth 1.0850 (bid)
  • You start 0.8 pips in the red
  • Price must move 0.8 pips for breakeven

Rule: Trade pairs with spreads <2 pips for day trading, <5 pips for swing trading

2. Volatility Selection

Day Trading: Choose volatile pairs (GBP/USD, GBP/JPY)
Swing Trading: Choose trending pairs (EUR/USD, USD/JPY)
Position Trading: Choose pairs with strong fundamentals

3. News Sensitivity

Some pairs react more to economic news:

Most Sensitive:

  • GBP pairs (UK economic data)
  • USD pairs (US economic data)
  • JPY pairs (BOJ policy, risk sentiment)

Less Sensitive:

  • CHF pairs (SNB rarely acts)
  • Minor crosses (less correlated to single economy)

Common Mistakes

Trading too many pairs - Stick to 3-5 pairs
Ignoring correlation - Diversify properly
Trading exotics as beginner - Start with majors
Not checking session times - Trade pairs when they're most active
Forgetting about spreads - Wide spreads eat profits

Summary: Pair Selection Cheat Sheet

Best for Beginners:

  • EUR/USD (low spread, high liquidity)
  • USD/JPY (predictable, safe haven)

Best for Day Trading:

  • GBP/USD (volatility + liquidity)
  • EUR/USD (constant movement)

Best for Scalping:

  • EUR/USD (tight spread)
  • USD/JPY (fast execution)

Best for Swing Trading:

  • AUD/USD (clear trends, commodity correlation)
  • EUR/JPY (trending, fundamental-driven)

Best for Risk-On/Off Trading:

  • AUD/JPY (ultimate risk pair)
  • Gold/USD (safe haven)

Next Steps

  1. Choose 2-3 pairs to focus on
  2. Study their historical charts to understand typical ranges
  3. Track correlation with our tools
  4. Paper trade each pair for 1 month before going live
  5. Read our guide on Forex Trading Hours to know when to trade each pair

Remember: It's better to master 3 pairs than to poorly trade 20. Deep knowledge of a few pairs beats surface knowledge of many.

Ready to compare brokers for the best spreads? Visit our Broker Comparison Tool →

FN Pulse Editorial Team

FN Pulse Editorial Team

Expert Trading Analysts

Our editorial team consists of experienced forex traders, financial analysts, and market researchers dedicated to providing accurate and actionable trading education.

    Understanding Currency Pairs | FN Pulse