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Education Center

Master the art and science of trading with expert-crafted courses, video tutorials, and daily market insights.

📚

What is Forex Trading?

A complete introduction to the foreign exchange market, currency pairs, and how forex trading works.

Beginner 8 min read
📊

Understanding Pips & Spreads

Learn what pips are, how spreads work, and how these core concepts affect your trading costs.

Beginner 6 min read
🛡

Risk Management Basics

Essential risk management techniques every trader must know, including position sizing and stop losses.

Beginner 10 min read
💡

Your First Trade: Step by Step

A hands-on walkthrough of placing your first forex trade, from analysis to execution.

Beginner 12 min read
📈

Reading Candlestick Charts

Master the basics of Japanese candlestick patterns and learn to read price action effectively.

Beginner 9 min read

Setting Up MetaTrader 4/5

Download, install, and configure MT4 or MT5 with your TradeMaster FX account in minutes.

Beginner 5 min read

Video Tutorials

Watch and learn from our expert instructors

Forex Trading for Complete Beginners

60-minute comprehensive course covering everything from opening an account to your first trade.

Video 60 min

Mastering Price Action Trading

Learn to trade without indicators using pure price action, support/resistance, and candlestick patterns.

Video 45 min

Gold (XAU/USD) Trading Strategies

Specialized strategies for trading gold, including correlation analysis and seasonal patterns.

Video 35 min

Risk Management Masterclass

Advanced position sizing, portfolio risk, and how to survive drawdowns while maximizing returns.

Video 50 min

Trading Glossary

Key terms every trader should know

Pip

A pip (Percentage in Point) is the smallest standard price movement in a currency pair. For most pairs, one pip equals 0.0001 of the quoted price. For JPY pairs, one pip equals 0.01.

Spread

The spread is the difference between the bid (sell) and ask (buy) price of an instrument. It represents the broker's implicit trading fee. Tighter spreads mean lower trading costs.

Leverage

Leverage allows you to control a larger position with a smaller amount of capital. For example, 1:100 leverage means $1,000 controls a $100,000 position. While it amplifies gains, it equally amplifies losses.

Margin

Margin is the amount of capital required to open and maintain a leveraged position. It acts as a good-faith deposit, not a fee. If your equity falls below the required margin, a margin call may be triggered.

Stop Loss

A stop loss is a predefined price level at which your trade will automatically close to limit losses. It is a critical risk management tool that protects your capital from excessive drawdowns.

Take Profit

A take profit is a preset price target at which your trade automatically closes to lock in gains. Setting take profit levels helps you maintain discipline and avoid holding positions too long.

Lot Size

A lot is the standard unit of measurement for trade volume. A standard lot equals 100,000 units of the base currency. Mini lots (10,000) and micro lots (1,000) are also commonly used for smaller positions.

Slippage

Slippage occurs when a trade is executed at a different price than expected, typically during high volatility or low liquidity. It can be positive (better price) or negative (worse price).

Market Analysis

Expert insights to inform your trading decisions

Daily

Daily Market Outlook

EUR/USD holds above 1.0840 ahead of key US data. Gold extends rally above $2,340 on safe-haven flows. Watch for NFP preview moves.

Mar 22, 2026 Read More
Weekly

Weekly Market Review

Dollar weakness persisted as rate cut expectations grew. GBP was the top performer among majors. Crude oil consolidated near $78.

Mar 21, 2026 Read More
Monthly

Monthly Performance Report

February saw major moves across asset classes. Central bank divergence drove trending moves in EUR and JPY. Full recap and March outlook inside.

Mar 01, 2026 Read More