2010-04-30 09:25:58
The major part of the Thursday session
2010-04-30 08:20:06
Overview of Major Currencies
2010-04-29 10:59:36
The Wednesday trades showed pessimism
2010-04-29 09:18:30
Fundamental view
2010-04-28 12:22:18
Since the beginning of trading on Tuesday
2010-04-28 08:09:47
Overview of the major currencies
2010-04-27 10:09:03
After much thought at the weekend the market penetrated
2010-04-26 11:05:47
The state of affairs in the mainland Europe
2010-04-23 10:06:47
The US dollar continued its triumph procession
2010-04-22 11:07:39
The US dollar enforced against the euro again
2010-04-21 10:17:40
Due to lack of relevant economic news from the USA on Tuesday
2010-04-19 11:40:43
The former week was completed with advantages of the "buck"
2010-04-16 09:03:15
Last Thursday the US dollar gave up both the GB, pound, yen
2010-04-15 11:19:03
On Wednesday the US dollar mainly declined
2010-04-14 10:24:52
The previous session was distinguished with the raise
2010-04-13 09:31:52
The opening of trading in the first day
2010-04-12 12:48:02
The European events were the main driver
2010-04-09 09:33:42
The past session was the first trading day this week
2010-04-08 08:36:19
Both the general picture of the market events
2010-04-07 08:42:39
The American currency charged under its belt
2010-04-06 09:41:30
Contrary to the expectations that the US dollar
2010-04-05 11:39:56
During the former weekly session the American dollar
2010-04-02 10:33:20
The Thursday result was the same as the day before
2010-04-01 10:31:02
The US dollar decreased against the euro at the session
Fundamental analysis
Get free fundamental analysis from Forex4you! The forex market is affected by world events, political situations and economics trends. If you understand the impact of these, you can predict the market and increase your forex trading profits. Fundamental analysis isn't easy. You need the accurate information about the following:- Banks
- Other financial institutions
- Economic performance
- Political developments
- Monetary policies
- National interest rates
- World events
- Stocks and bonds
- There's a huge amount of raw data
- Factors interact in complex ways
- Similar events can cause different results – depending on the circumstances
- Understanding the data needs deep, multi-faceted analysis
- You need to know how the market reacted in the past