Trading Fundamentals

    Currency Pairs Explained

    Learn how major, minor, and exotic currency pairs are categorised, and how liquidity, spreads, and volatility may differ.

    How Currency Pairs Work

    In forex, currencies are quoted in pairs because each trade involves buying one currency and selling another. The first currency in the pair is the base currency, and the second is the quote currency. The price tells you how much of the quote currency is needed to buy one unit of the base currency.

    The Majors

    Major currency pairs include the US dollar paired with one of the world's most traded currencies, such as EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY, USD/CHF, AUD/USD, USD/CAD, and NZD/USD. These pairs are generally among the most liquid forex pairs, which may be associated with tighter spreads and more active pricing during major trading sessions.

    Minors and Crosses

    Minor pairs, also called crosses, are currency pairs that do not include the US dollar but consist of other major currencies, such as EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, or GBP/JPY. Liquidity may be lower than in major pairs, and spreads may be wider depending on market conditions and the instruments being traded.

    Exotic Pairs

    Exotic pairs combine a major currency with a currency from a smaller or emerging-market economy, such as USD/TRY, USD/ZAR, or USD/MXN. These pairs may have wider spreads, lower liquidity, and higher volatility than major or minor pairs. Political or economic developments can also lead to rapid price movement or price gaps.

    Comparing Currency Pairs

    Participants may compare currency pairs based on liquidity, spreads, volatility, trading hours, and sensitivity to economic events. Major pairs are often easier to research because they are widely followed, while crosses and exotics may require closer attention to liquidity conditions and regional news.

    Liquidity and Spreads

    Liquidity can vary by currency pair, trading session, and market conditions. Major pairs often have higher liquidity during active sessions, such as the London/New York overlap. Higher liquidity may be associated with tighter spreads, while lower-liquidity periods or exotic pairs may be associated with wider spreads and increased slippage.

    Pair Characteristics

    Currency pairs can behave differently depending on liquidity, trading session, interest rate expectations, and market sentiment. Some pairs may move more steadily, while others may experience wider ranges or sharper price movement. Reviewing historical price behaviour can help participants better understand how different pairs respond to changing market conditions.

    Start Your Evaluation

    Select your evaluation account to apply these concepts in a simulated evaluation program built around discipline, consistency, and risk management.