Currency trading

Has a long history and  can be traced  back to the ancient Middle East and Middle Ages when foreign exchange started to take shape after the international merchant bankers devised bills of  exchange, which were transferable third-party payments that allowed flexibility and growth in foreign exchange dealings.

 
The modern foreign exchange market characterized by periods of  high volatility (that is a frequency and an amplitude of a price alteration) and relative stability  formed itself in the twentieth century. By the mid-1930s the British capital London became to be the leading center for  foreign exchange and the British pound served as the currency to trade and to keep as a reserve currency.  Because in the old times foreign exchange was traded on the telex machines, or cable, the pound has generally the nickname “cable”.

After the World War II, where the British economy was destroyed and the United States was  the only country unscarred by war , U.S. dollar, in accordance with the Breton Woods Accord between the USA, Great Britain and France (1944)became the reserve currency for all the capitalist countries and all currencies were pegged to the American dollar (through the constitution of currencies ranges maintained by central banks of relevant countries by means of the interventions or currency purchases). In turn, the U.S. dollar was pegged to gold at $35 per ounce. Thus,  the U.S. dollar became the world's reserve currency. In accordance with the same agreement  was organized the International Monetary Fund (IMF) rendering now a significant financial support to the developing and former socialist countries effecting economical transformation.  To execute these goals the IMF uses such instruments as Reserve trenches, which allows a member to draw on its own reserve asset quota at the  time of payment,  Credit trenches drawings  and  stand-by arrangements.