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Getting Started with Forex Trading Using Python

You're reading from  Getting Started with Forex Trading Using Python

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804616857
Pages 384 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Alex Krishtop Alex Krishtop
Profile icon Alex Krishtop

Table of Contents (21) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction to FX Trading Strategy Development
2. Chapter 1: Developing Trading Strategies – Why They Are Different 3. Chapter 2: Using Python for Trading Strategies 4. Chapter 3: FX Market Overview from a Developer's Standpoint 5. Part 2: General Architecture of a Trading Application and A Detailed Study of Its Components
6. Chapter 4: Trading Application: What’s Inside? 7. Chapter 5: Retrieving and Handling Market Data with Python 8. Chapter 6: Basics of Fundamental Analysis and Its Possible Use in FX Trading 9. Chapter 7: Technical Analysis and Its Implementation in Python 10. Chapter 8: Data Visualization in FX Trading with Python 11. Part 3: Orders, Trading Strategies, and Their Performance
12. Chapter 9: Trading Strategies and Their Core Elements 13. Chapter 10: Types of Orders and Their Simulation in Python 14. Chapter 11: Backtesting and Theoretical Performance 15. Part 4: Strategies, Performance Analysis, and Vistas
16. Chapter 12: Sample Strategy – Trend-Following 17. Chapter 13: To Trade or Not to Trade – Performance Analysis 18. Chapter 14: Where to Go Now? 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Arbitrage – let’s earn from others’ mistakes

Arbitrage in financial markets means taking advantage of situations when the same asset is priced differently at different trading venues. Such a situation is usually called mispricing (there are other meanings of this term, and we will get back to it in the very next section about statistical arbitrage). Due to the colossal fragmentation of the FX market (see Chapter 3, FX Market Overview from a Developer’s Standpoint) mispricing there is not infrequent, so an arbitrage strategy looks pretty straightforward: as soon as we see that, say, EURUSD is priced at 1.00012 at LMAX and 1.00013 at IS Prime, then we simultaneously buy at LMAX and sell at IS Prime, pocketing one-tenth of a pip.

I think you can clearly see some problems with arbitrage, which directly follow from its description.

First, the potential profit from a single trade is ridiculously small, so you have to make lots of trades in order to be consistently...

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