|
With a US$5,000 balance in your margin account, you decide
that the US Dollar (USD) is undervalued against the Swiss
Franc (CHF).
To execute this strategy, you
must buy Dollars (simultaneously selling Francs), and then
wait for the exchange rate to rise.
The current bid/ask price for
USD/CHF is 1.6322/1.6327 (meaning you can buy $1 US for
1.6327 Swiss Francs or sell $1 US for 1.6322)
Your available leverage is
100:1 or 1%. You execute the trade, buying a one lot: buying
100,000 US dollars and selling 163,270 Swiss Francs.
At 100:1 leverage, your
initial margin deposit for this trade is $1,000. Your
account balance is now $4000.
As you expected, USD/CHF
rises to 1.6435/40. You can now sell $1 US for 1.6435 Francs
or buy $1 US for 1.6440 Francs. Since you're long dollars
(and are short francs), you must now sell dollars and buy
back the francs to realize any profit.
Conversly, using this same
example, if the USD/CHF had fallen (the USD weakened) by the
same amount you had expected it to rise, as you had not
expected, and, you had not limited your loss by offsetting
the position earlier, or by using a judicious stop, on this
example, your loss would had been (-US$657.13)
You close out the position,
selling one lot (selling 100,000 US dollar and receiving
164,350 CHF) Since you originally sold (paid) 163,270 CHF,
your profit is 1080 CHF.
To calculate your P&L in
terms of US dollars, simply divide 1080 by the current USD/CHF
rate of 1.6435. Your profit on this trade is $657.13
SUMMARY
|
Initial
Investment: |
$1000 |
|
|
|
Profit: |
$657.13 |
|
|
|
Return
on investment: |
65.7% |
If you had executed this
trade without using leverage, your return on investment
would be less than 1%.
Conversly, using this same
example, if the USD/CHF had fallen (the USD weakened) by the
same amount you had expected it to rise, as you had not
expected, and, you had not limited your loss by offsetting
the position earlier, or by using a judicious stop, on this
example, your loss would had been (-US$657.13) |