Forex History
Some of the earliest currencies can be traced
back to the Middle East around 5000 years ago, these were
Gold Bars and Gold Rings. In 650BC coin was first minted
in Ephesus, using an alloy of Gold and Silver and these
were struck with an image on one side. At this time China
was also creating coin, cast from bronze and formed into
more complex shapes. The early Chinese round coin with a
square hole did not occur until the late 3rd century
BC.
The Greeks produced the earliest European currencies, plus
the concept of credit and debt, to facilitate movement around
the country without needing to transport quantities of coin. As
time progressed, the Romans adopted and formalised the Greek
system and this has formed the basis of today’s currencies.
Paper money first occurs in China in 910AD, but because the
Emperors could print it freely, major inflation occurred and it
was abolished in the 15th century (history hasn’t taught us
much).
Sweden introduced the first European paper notes and also
the first bank. Stockholm Banco was established in 1656 and
introduced a paper note which could be exchanged for a fixed
value in silver coins. Again inflation destroys the system,
when the banks owner; Palmstruch prints more notes than he
could secure with cash. In 1667 the system collapses and he is
imprisoned for fraud.
There are many further developments of paper money, all
having problems until the British Government introduced the
Gold standard in 1821.
International trade has always involved exchange of items of
value, everything from Cowrie shells in Africa to Wampum in
America. It was just a matter of attributing a common value and
all has had its problems until the Gold Standard
arrived.
In the early 20th Century, the Pound Stirling was the
principal currency and the centre for foreign exchange was
London. The Second World War saw the demise of his, with the
Gold pegged $US taking over.
In 1944 the Bretton Woods Accord gave rise to two
significant elements of the Foreign Currency Market, it struck
an agreement whereby no other currency was allowed to fluctuate
more then 1% in relation to the $US. If excessive fluctuation
did occur, the central bank which controlled the fluctuating
currency had to step in to stabilise it, and it gave rise to
the creation of the IMF – The International Monetary Fund.
The IMF took on the role of a World Finance Legislator,
producing a stable system for the sale of currencies, promotion
of world trade and providing financial resources to member
countries with the requirement that changes be undertaken to
rectify the situations causing the need for financial
assistance.
In 1978 the IMF proposed that currencies become
‘Free-Floating’, this allowed currencies to be traded freely
and values determined by both supply and demand and the country
of origins economic stability and productivity or what ever the
international marketplace deemed appropriate.
In 1979 the European Monetary System was born, but the
British decided to keep out of the economic conglomerate and
when the Euro was adopted in 1998 as the European Currency, The
British retained the Pound as their currency. This action gave
the Forex an additional trading currency GBP. Now the Forex had
EUR/GBP, GBP/USD, GBP/CHF, GBP/CAD and others, but many will
notice that comparing cross Atlantic currencies , some charts
can follow very similar trends.
When currencies were free-floated in 1978 the Forex traded
around US$5billion per day, at the beginning of 2009 that has
risen to around US$4trillion. It is now the biggest trading
market, eclipsing all the stock markets combined.
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