Investor psychology cycles influences the bullish or bearish mood of the foreign currency exchange market. How do words like “mood” and “sentiment” relate to the foreign currency exchange market? Presumably, emotions do not belong to a place where people buy and sell goods. Moreover, all textbooks recommend not to emotionalise markets and to minimise the influence of emotions in taking any business decisions.
Investor
psychology cycles influences the bullish or bearish mood of the
foreign currency exchange market. How do words like
“mood” and “sentiment” relate to the foreign currency exchange market?
Presumably, emotions do not belong to a place where people buy and sell goods.
Moreover, all textbooks recommend not to emotionalise markets and to minimise
the influence of emotions in taking any business decisions.
All
market players are living creatures and are driven by psychological factors. The market exists in the human society context
and the mood and sentiment of all market participants reproduce a behavioural
model similar to those of other societies.
Economic
theory introduces a term known as “investor psychology cycle” which describes
the changing mood of investors in deciding whether to buy or sell a particular
currency. This mood is closely related to the overall market sentiment and can
force a currency pair rate to rise or fall in violation of some basic rules of
financial analysis.
In
a typical investor psychological cycle, literarally all market players pass
through several stages ranging from doubt and suspicion, through caution and
confidence, which peaks in the enthusiasm stage. Later, this mood gradually
transforms into indifference, dismissal and denial to end in fear, panic and
contempt. Actually, such market behaviour resembles the everyday experience of
all human beings who hesitate in coping with a particular situation. The
situation can go either way; a happy end is as possible as a tragic end.
Financial
dictionaries and encyclopedias use explanations like “from absolute euphoria to
downright gloom and despondency” when trying to describe the market mood and
sentiment. The prevailing emotion of market participants will determine what
direction the foreign
currency exchange market will follow and market
players’ decisions will be driven by this prevailing mood.
An
outside market observer can identify easily the present market mood and to try
forecasting the movement of the foreign currency market, relying on
observations he made. But it is not that
simple. Sometimes the market is confused
and indecisive in addition to its natural volatility. Therefore, predicting the
next market movement requires profound market knowledge, thorough market
analysis, and – curiously enough – intuition.
Of
course, there are also objective causes for the market mood to change. News on
fundamental economic indicators like inflation, unemployment, trade balance,
etc., will force the currency exchange rate to rise or drop depending on how
good or poor figures are. In the case of a bearish market sentiment, when
prevailing expectations are that the market will go up, good news about a
particular currency will support the market mood and its exchange rate against
other currencies will rise. In contrast, bad news in a bearish market will add
to the prevailing market sentiment and the
currency exchange rate will fall further.
However,
those are very simplified formulations. Understanding the psychology of market
players requires a broad market experience and expertise that successful
dealers gain in the course of a long career.
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| About the author |
Ridgewell Hawkes writes articles relating to the financial services. If you need to make a large or regular overseas payment consider the help of a currency transfer specialist. |
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