Forex is simply a shortened form of ‘foreign
exchange’. It’s the market where currencies are traded with one another and
affects everyday prices, travel plans and business costs in Ghana.
If you have ever bought dollars for school
fees, received a remittance or priced imported stock, you already know that
exchange rates can change fast. The foreign-exchange market, often shortened to
‘forex’, is simply the system where one currency is traded for another through
banks and financial platforms. Forex trading is the step beyond that: trying to
profit from those moves, by swapping one currency for another at the right
time.
If you’ve ever wondered about what’s involved,
you can start off with this plain-language explainer of forex trading.
It helps you separate what is real from what is ‘get-rich-quick’ noise, and it
gives you the key ideas you will see on every trading app.
How
Forex Works In Practice
Currencies are quoted in pairs like EUR/USD or
GBP/USD. The first currency is the ‘base’, the second is the ‘quote’. So if
EUR/USD is 1.10, one euro costs 1.10 US dollars. A trader is not necessarily
concerned whether the euro is ‘strong’ in general, but whether it will rise or
fall against another specific currency.
Forex is also huge. The Bank for International
Settlements reported average daily turnover of about $9.6 trillion in April
2025, with the US dollar on one side of 89% of trades. That size is a
double-edged sword: markets can be easily bought or sold into, but prices can
still jump when big institutions hedge, rebalance or react to news.
Most retail traders do not exchange physical
cash. They trade price movements via online products such as CFDs (‘Contracts
for Difference’), for which your profit or loss is based on the change in the
exchange rate. Because you can use leverage, small moves can have large effects
on your account balance.
Why
It’s A Big Deal In Ghana
In Ghana, currency moves do not stay on a
Bloomberg screen. They show up in the cost of imported goods, fuel, online
subscriptions and sometimes rent negotiations. In late 2025, S&P Global
noted that the cedi had grown by about 30% against the US dollar during 2025.
Whether the next big move is up or down, that kind of swing is enough to make
anyone curious about how the system works.
Remittances, or money paid into Ghanaian
accounts from elsewhere, add another layer. Bank of Ghana reported private
remittance flows of $6 billion in the first nine months of 2025, up 11.4% from
the same period in 2024. If you receive money from abroad, you are exposed to
the exchange rate even if you never place a trade. Small businesses are exposed
too, not least importers who buy goods priced in dollars.
The
Basics That Keep Beginners Safe
A beginner does not need dozens of indicators.
You need a few risk ideas that stop one bad day from becoming a disaster:
- Spread: the small gap between
buy and sell prices
- Leverage and margin: borrowed
exposure and the deposit that supports it
- Position size: how big your
trade is, relative to your account
- Stop-loss: an order that closes
a trade if price goes the wrong way
If you remember only one rule, make it this:
trade smaller than you think you need to. Use a ‘demo account’ first, then go
live with the smallest position-sizes available. Aim to risk a tiny portion of
your balance on any one trade, and do not add money to ‘chase’ a loss. Keep a
simple trading journal too, because writing down entries and exits forces
honesty about what is working. And never trade with borrowed money.
You should also be realistic about exotic
pairs, including USD/GHS, as they can have wider spreads and sharper gaps than
major pairs like EUR/USD. That does not mean you should avoid it, but it does
mean you should treat it with extra caution.
Scams,
Rules And What To Check
Forex’s popularity attracts fraudsters. Be
wary of ‘guaranteed returns’, ‘VIP signal groups’ and anyone telling you to
send funds to a personal wallet. In real trading, losses happen, and no one can
promise monthly profits without risk.
It is also worth respecting local rules around
foreign currency use. In February 2026, the Bank of Ghana again reminded the
public that unlicensed or unauthorised forex activity and pricing goods or
services in foreign currency within Ghana are prohibited under the Foreign
Exchange Act. The Bank of Ghana has also stated that FX brokers who want to
operate in Ghana’s interbank forex market must obtain prior approval.
For someone considering retail trading, that
translates into simple checks: use reputable platforms, verify who you are
dealing with and avoid middlemen who want to handle deposits on your behalf.
A
Sensible Next Step
If you want to learn without burning money,
connect forex to your real life. Track USD/GHS for a month and write down what
drove the moves: inflation news, policy decisions, commodity prices or global
risk sentiment. Then practise placing a few tiny trades on demo, focusing on
discipline rather than profit.
Forex trading can be a useful skill, but it is
not a shortcut. Learn the basics, respect the risks and keep your
position-sizes small. Even if you never become an active trader, understanding
exchange rates will still make you a sharper consumer, saver and business
owner.

0 Comments