
Forex Trading Explained: What Actually Moves Currency Pairs
Forex trading explained through the real forces behind currency pairs: interest rates, inflation, growth, risk appetite, DXY, and technical execution.

Forex trading explained through the real forces behind currency pairs: interest rates, inflation, growth, risk appetite, DXY, and technical execution.

DXY impacts forex pairs by showing broad US dollar strength or weakness and helping traders filter major forex setups.

A forex watchlist using macro data helps traders rank currencies, select cleaner pairs, and avoid random signal-based trading.

Trade forex without chasing news by using macro structure, currency strength, risk filters, and technical execution instead of headline reactions.

Technical and macro forex trading are different layers of one process: macro creates bias while technical analysis defines execution.

The Valeron approach to forex starts with macro bias, filters currency strength, waits for technical execution, and protects capital through risk control.

A forex pair strong or weak reading depends on relative currency strength, rates, macro conditions, risk appetite, and technical structure.

Currency strength matters more than random signals because forex trading is relative and clean opportunities come from strong versus weak currencies.

Interest rates in forex matter because currency values respond to yield expectations, central-bank policy, inflation pressure, and capital flow.

Valeron filters stocks before entries by using macro context, sector strength, relative performance, fundamentals, technical structure, and risk.